Self-Regulatory Organizations; Financial Industry Regulatory Authority, Inc.; Notice of Filing of a Proposed Rule Change To Amend the Codes of Arbitration Procedure Relating to Requests To Expunge Customer Dispute Information, Including Creating a Special Arbitrator Roster To Decide Certain Expungement Requests, 62142-62175 [2020-21660]
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Federal Register / Vol. 85, No. 191 / Thursday, October 1, 2020 / Notices
SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE
COMMISSION
[Release No. 34–90000; File No. SR–FINRA–
2020–030]
Self-Regulatory Organizations;
Financial Industry Regulatory
Authority, Inc.; Notice of Filing of a
Proposed Rule Change To Amend the
Codes of Arbitration Procedure
Relating to Requests To Expunge
Customer Dispute Information,
Including Creating a Special Arbitrator
Roster To Decide Certain
Expungement Requests
September 25, 2020.
jbell on DSKJLSW7X2PROD with NOTICES2
Pursuant to Section 19(b)(1) of the
Securities Exchange Act of 1934
(‘‘Act’’) 1 and Rule 19b–4 thereunder,2
notice is hereby given that on
September 22, 2020, the Financial
Industry Regulatory Authority, Inc.
(‘‘FINRA’’) filed with the Securities and
Exchange Commission (‘‘SEC’’ or
‘‘Commission’’) the proposed rule
change as described in Items I, II, and
III below, which Items have been
prepared by FINRA. The Commission is
publishing this notice to solicit
comments on the proposed rule change
from interested persons.
I. Self-Regulatory Organization’s
Statement of the Terms of Substance of
the Proposed Rule Change
FINRA is proposing to amend the
Code of Arbitration Procedure for
Customer Disputes (‘‘Customer Code’’)
and the Code of Arbitration Procedure
for Industry Disputes (‘‘Industry Code’’)
(together, ‘‘Codes’’) to modify the
current process relating to the
expungement of customer dispute
information.
Specifically, the proposed rule change
would amend the Codes to: (1) Impose
requirements on expungement requests
(a) filed during an investment-related,
customer initiated arbitration
(‘‘customer arbitration’’) by an
associated person, or by a party to the
customer arbitration on-behalf-of an
associated person (‘‘on-behalf-of
request’’), or (b) filed by an associated
person separate from a customer
arbitration (‘‘straight-in request’’); (2)
establish a roster of arbitrators with
enhanced training and experience from
which a three-person panel would be
randomly selected to decide straight-in
requests; (3) establish procedural
requirements for expungement hearings;
and (4) codify and update the best
practices of the Notice to Arbitrators
and Parties on Expanded Expungement
1 15
2 17
U.S.C. 78s(b)(1).
CFR 240.19b–4.
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Guidance (‘‘Guidance’’) that arbitrators
and parties must follow.3 In addition,
the proposed rule change would amend
the Customer Code to specify
procedures for requesting expungement
of customer dispute information arising
from simplified arbitrations. The
proposed rule change would also amend
the Codes to establish requirements for
notifying state securities regulators and
customers of expungement requests.
The text of the proposed rule change
is available on FINRA’s website at
https://www.finra.org, at the principal
office of FINRA and at the
Commission’s Public Reference Room.
II. Self-Regulatory Organization’s
Statement of the Purpose of, and
Statutory Basis for, the Proposed Rule
Change
In its filing with the Commission,
FINRA included statements concerning
the purpose of and basis for the
proposed rule change and discussed any
comments it received on the proposed
rule change. The text of these statements
may be examined at the places specified
in Item IV below. FINRA has prepared
summaries, set forth in sections A, B,
and C below, of the most significant
aspects of such statements.
A. Self-Regulatory Organization’s
Statement of the Purpose of, and
Statutory Basis for, the Proposed Rule
Change
1. Purpose
(I) Background and Discussion
A. Customer Dispute Information in the
Central Registration Depository
Information regarding customer
disputes involving associated persons is
maintained in the Central Registration
Depository (‘‘CRD®’’), the central
licensing and registration system used
by the U.S. securities industry and its
regulators.4 FINRA operates the CRD
system pursuant to policies developed
jointly with NASAA. FINRA works with
the SEC, NASAA and other members of
the regulatory community to ensure that
information submitted and maintained
in the CRD system is accurate and
complete.
3 See Guidance, available at https://
www.finra.org/arbitration-and-mediation/noticearbitrators-and-parties-expanded-expungementguidance.
4 The concept for the CRD system was developed
by FINRA jointly with the North American
Securities Administrators Association (‘‘NASAA’’).
The CRD system fulfills FINRA’s statutory
obligation to establish and maintain a system to
collect and retain registration information. NASAA
and state regulators play a critical role in the
ongoing development and implementation of the
CRD system.
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In general, the information in the CRD
system is submitted by registered
securities firms, brokers and regulatory
authorities in response to questions on
the uniform registration forms.5 These
forms are used to collect registration
information, which includes, among
other things, administrative, regulatory,
criminal history, financial and other
information about brokers, such as
customer complaints, arbitration claims
and court filings made by customers
(i.e., ‘‘customer dispute information’’).
FINRA, state and other regulators use
this information in connection with
their licensing and regulatory activities,
and member firms use this information
to help them make informed
employment decisions.
Pursuant to rules approved by the
SEC, FINRA makes specific CRD
information publicly available through
BrokerCheck®.6 BrokerCheck is part of
FINRA’s ongoing effort to help investors
make informed choices about the
brokers and broker-dealer firms with
which they may conduct business.
BrokerCheck maintains information on
the approximately 3,600 registered
broker-dealer firms and 624,000
registered brokers. BrokerCheck also
provides the public with access to
information about formerly registered
broker-dealer firms and brokers.7 In
2019 alone, BrokerCheck helped users
conduct more than 40 million searches
of firms and brokers.
The regulatory framework governing
the CRD system and BrokerCheck has
long contemplated the possibility of
expunging certain customer dispute
5 The uniform registration forms are Form BD
(Uniform Application for Broker-Dealer
Registration), Form BDW (Uniform Request for
Broker-Dealer Withdrawal), Form BR (Uniform
Branch Office Registration Form), Form U4
(Uniform Application for Securities Industry
Registration or Transfer), Form U5 (Uniform
Termination Notice for Securities Industry
Registration) and Form U6 (Uniform Disciplinary
Action Reporting Form).
6 Section 15A of the Exchange Act requires
FINRA to provide registration information to the
public. BrokerCheck is one of the tools through
which FINRA disseminates this information to the
public. There is a limited amount of information in
the CRD system that FINRA does not display
through BrokerCheck, including personal or
confidential information. A detailed description of
the information made available through
BrokerCheck is available at https://www.finra.org/
investors/about-brokercheck.
7 Formerly registered brokers, although no longer
in the securities industry in a registered capacity,
may work in other investment-related industries or
may seek to attain other positions of trust with
potential investors. BrokerCheck provides
information on more than 17,000 formerly
registered broker-dealer firms and nearly 567,000
formerly registered brokers. Broker records are
available in BrokerCheck for 10 years after a broker
leaves the industry, and brokers who are the subject
of disciplinary actions and certain other events
remain on BrokerCheck permanently.
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Federal Register / Vol. 85, No. 191 / Thursday, October 1, 2020 / Notices
information from these systems in
limited circumstances, such as where
the allegations made about the broker
are factually impossible or clearly
erroneous. The expungement framework
seeks to balance the competing interests
of providing regulators broad access to
information about customer disputes to
fulfill their regulatory obligations,
providing a fair process that recognizes
a broker’s interest in protecting their
reputation and ensuring investors have
access to accurate information about
brokers.
B. FINRA Rules 2080, 12805 and 13805
Governing Expungement of Customer
Dispute Information
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A broker can seek expungement of
customer dispute information by
obtaining a court expungement order (1)
by going through the FINRA arbitration
process (and then obtaining a court
order confirming an arbitration award
containing expungement) or (2) by going
directly to court (without first going to
arbitration).
FINRA rules require arbitrators to
perform fact-finding before
recommending expungement of
customer dispute information and to
provide information about the basis for
the expungement. Specifically, FINRA
Rules 12805 and 13805 require
arbitrators to hold a recorded hearing
regarding the appropriateness of
expungement of customer dispute
information and to review settlement
documents, the amount of payments
made to any party and any other terms
and conditions of the settlement.8
In addition, these rules require
arbitrators to indicate whether they have
awarded expungement because: (1) The
claim, allegation or information is
factually impossible or clearly
erroneous; (2) the associated person was
not involved in the alleged investmentrelated sales practice violation, forgery,
theft, misappropriation or conversion of
funds; or (3) the claim, allegation or
information is false.9 The arbitrators are
further required to provide a brief
written explanation of the reasons for
recommending expungement.10 These
8 In almost every proceeding, all or a majority of
the arbitrators considering an expungement request
are public arbitrators. Among other requirements,
public arbitrators have never been employed by the
securities industry; do not devote 20 percent or
more of their professional work to the securities
industry or to parties in disputes concerning
investment accounts or transactions or employment
relationships within the financial industry; and do
not have immediate family members or co-workers
who do so. See FINRA Rule 12100(aa).
9 See FINRA Rules 2080, 12805 and 13805.
10 Although FINRA Rules 12805 and 13805 state
that the panel may ‘‘grant’’ expungement of
customer dispute information under FINRA Rule
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requirements are supplemented with
extensive guidance and training,
including the Guidance, first published
in 2013 and expanded further
periodically thereafter.11 The Guidance
provides arbitrators with best practices
and recommendations to follow, in
addition to the requirements of FINRA
Rules 12805 and 13805, when deciding
expungement requests.
Regardless of whether expungement
of customer dispute information is
sought directly through a court or in
arbitration, FINRA Rule 2080, which
was developed in close consultation
with representatives of NASAA and
state regulators, requires a broker-dealer
firm or broker seeking expungement to
obtain an order of a court of competent
jurisdiction directing such expungement
or confirming an award containing
expungement. FINRA will expunge
customer dispute information only after
the court orders it to execute the
expungement.12
C. Concerns Regarding Expungement
Some stakeholders of the forum have
raised concerns about expungement
hearings held after the parties settle the
customer arbitration that gave rise to the
customer dispute information.13 In
2080, the panel’s decision regarding an
expungement request is not the final step in the
process. A person seeking expungement must
obtain a court order confirming an arbitration award
for FINRA to expunge the customer dispute
information from the CRD system. Accordingly,
FINRA believes the word ‘‘recommend’’ more
accurately describes the panel’s role in the
expungement process. It has been FINRA’s
longstanding practice to state in expungement
awards that the arbitrators ‘‘recommend,’’ rather
than ‘‘grant,’’ expungement. See also infra note 132,
and accompanying text (stating that the proposed
amendments to FINRA Rules 12805(c) and 13805(c)
would also provide that the panel would
‘‘recommend’’ rather than ‘‘grant’’ expungement).
11 See supra note 3.
12 FINRA Rule 2080 also requires that firms and
brokers seeking a court order or confirmation of the
arbitration award containing expungement name
FINRA as a party, and provides that FINRA will
challenge the request in court in appropriate
circumstances. FINRA may, however, waive the
requirement to name it as a party if a firm or broker
requests a waiver and FINRA determines that the
award containing expungement is based on
affirmative judicial or arbitral findings that: (1) The
claim, allegation or information is factually
impossible or clearly erroneous; (2) the associated
person was not involved in the alleged investmentrelated sales practice violation, forgery, theft,
misappropriation or conversion of funds; or (3) the
claim, allegation, or information is false. In
addition, FINRA has sole discretion ‘‘under
extraordinary circumstances’’ to waive the
requirement that it be named in a court proceeding
if it determines that the request for expungement
and accompanying award are meritorious and
expungement would not have a material adverse
effect on investor protection, the integrity of the
CRD system, or regulatory requirements. See FINRA
Rule 2080(b).
13 In its Final Report and Recommendations, the
FINRA Dispute Resolution Task Force (‘‘Task
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62143
many of these instances, the panel from
the customer arbitration has not heard
the full merits of that case and,
therefore, may not have any special
insights in determining whether to
recommend a request for expungement
of customer dispute information.
Further, customers and their
representatives typically do not
participate in an expungement hearing
after the customer arbitration settles,
especially if the expungement hearing
occurs a number of years later.14 In
addition, a broker may file a straight-in
request against a member firm for the
sole purpose of requesting
expungement.15 In most of these
straight-in requests, the customer
Force’’) included a recommendation to create a
special arbitration panel consisting of specially
trained arbitrators to decide expungement requests
in settled cases and in cases when a claimant did
not name the associated person as a respondent in
the case. See https://www.finra.org/sites/default/
files/Final-DR-task-force-report.pdf; see also letter
from Barbara Black, Professor of Law, University of
Cincinnati College of Law (Retired), to Marcia
Asquith, Office of the Corporate Secretary, FINRA,
dated February 5, 2018 (‘‘Black’’) (discussing the
Task Force’s recommendation) and letter from
Joseph Borg, President, NASAA, to Marcia Asquith,
Office of the Corporate Secretary, FINRA, dated
February 5, 2018 (‘‘NASAA’’) (commenting that
post-settlement expungement hearings often consist
of one-sided presentations of the facts). These and
other letters responding to Regulatory Notice 17–42
(December 2017) (‘‘Notice 17–42’’) are discussed in
Item II.C. below.
14 The Codes provide that no claim shall be
eligible for submission to arbitration under the
Codes where six years have elapsed from the
occurrence or event giving rise to the claim. The
panel resolves any questions regarding the
eligibility of a claim under this rule. See FINRA
Rules 12206(a) and 13206(a) (Time Limitation on
Submission of Claims). This six-year eligibility rule
applies to all arbitration claims, including those
requesting expungement. Thus, if an associated
person requests expungement of a CRD disclosure
where six years have elapsed since the customer
complaint, arbitration or civil litigation was
initially reported, the arbitrator or panel should
consider whether the claim is eligible for
arbitration.
In addition, FINRA Rules 12409 and 13413
(Jurisdiction of Panel and Authority to Interpret the
Code) provide that the panel has the authority to
interpret and determine the applicability of all
provisions under the Codes. Such interpretations
are final and binding upon the parties. Together, the
rules grant arbitrators the authority to decide
whether a claim is eligible for arbitration under the
Codes. See Howsam v. Dean Witter Reynolds, 537
U.S. 79, 85–86 (2002) (finding that an arbitrator
properly decides issues of eligibility).
Arbitrators should ensure that an expungement
claim is eligible under the Codes and arbitrators
may decide the eligibility issue on their own, rather
than only in response to a party’s motion. See Horst
v. FINRA, No. A–18–777960–C (Dist. Ct. Nevada
Oct. 25, 2018) (Order Denying Motion to Vacate
Arbitration Award) (ruling that an arbitrator may
raise sua sponte the eligibility issue, not only when
a party to the arbitration raises it in a motion).
15 Currently, on rare occasions, straight-in
requests are filed against a customer. As discussed
below, the proposed amendments would prohibit
these filings. See infra Item II.A.1.(II)A.2., ‘‘No
Straight-in Requests Against Customers.’’
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dispute information arises from a
customer arbitration or customer
complaint that was disclosed on the
broker’s CRD record a number of years
prior to the request.16 Thus, during
these expungement hearings, the panel
may receive information only from the
associated person requesting
expungement.
Further, FINRA is concerned that an
increasing number of straight-in
requests are being heard by a single
arbitrator instead of a three-person
panel.17 FINRA believes that most
expungement requests should be
decided by a three-person panel.
Expungement requests may be complex
to resolve, particularly straight-in
requests where customers typically do
not participate in the expungement
hearing. Thus, having three arbitrators
available to ask questions, request
evidence and to serve generally as factfinders in the absence of customer input
would help ensure that a complete
factual record is created to support the
arbitrators’ decision in such
expungement hearings.
In addition, FINRA is concerned that
some associated persons are making
second requests to expunge the same
customer dispute information that they
previously requested be expunged by a
court or another arbitration panel. For
example, an associated person may have
a CRD disclosure that resulted from a
customer’s arbitration claim, but
because the associated person is not
named as a party to the customer
16 Several questions on Forms U4 and U5 require
associated persons to disclose certain investmentrelated, consumer-initiated (i) complaints and (ii)
arbitrations and civil litigations, alleging sales
practice violations. See Form U4, Question 14I,
available at https://www.finra.org/sites/default/
files/form-u4.pdf and Form U5, Question 7E,
available at https://www.finra.org/sites/default/
files/form-u5.pdf. These disclosures become part of
the associated person’s CRD record and are made
available on BrokerCheck.
17 An expungement request is a non-monetary or
not specified claim. The Codes require that such
claims are heard by a panel of three arbitrators,
unless the parties agree in writing to one arbitrator.
In addition, if a party requesting expungement adds
a small monetary claim (of less than $100,000) to
the expungement request, the Codes require that
such claims are heard by one arbitrator. See FINRA
Rules 12401 and 13401. FINRA has amended the
Codes to apply minimum fees to expungement
requests, whether the request is made as part of the
customer arbitration or the associated person files
an expungement request in a separate arbitration.
The amendments also apply a minimum process fee
and member surcharge to straight-in requests, as
well as a minimum hearing session fee to
expungement-only hearings. See Securities
Exchange Act Release No. 88945 (May 26, 2020), 85
FR 33212 (June 1, 2020) (Order Approving File No.
SR–FINRA–2020–005). See also Regulatory Notice
20–25 (July 2020) (announcing a September 14,
2020 effective date) at https://www.finra.org/rulesguidance/notices/20-25.
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arbitration (‘‘unnamed person’’),18 the
associated person is not able to request
expungement in the customer
arbitration.19 When a firm asks, onbehalf-of the unnamed person, that the
arbitrators recommend expungement,
the unnamed person, as a non-party in
the customer arbitration, may
subsequently argue that he or she did
not receive adequate notice of the
expungement request or an opportunity
to participate in the earlier proceeding.
The unnamed person may then file a
new claim to expunge the same
disclosure that the firm requested on the
unnamed person’s behalf, despite the
fact that the panel denied the
expungement request in the prior
matter.
FINRA believes that re-filing an
expungement request that has been
denied by an arbitration panel
undermines the integrity of the
arbitration process and the information
in the CRD system. Arbitration awards
are final and binding on the parties. If
an associated person seeks to challenge
an arbitration award, the associated
person can do so by filing a motion to
vacate in court.
In addition, some associated persons
make second requests for expungement
after withdrawing or deciding not to
pursue an expungement request made in
a customer arbitration, believing that
another panel who has not heard the
merits of the claim may be more likely
to recommend expungement. FINRA is
concerned about this practice of
‘‘arbitrator shopping,’’ particularly
when associated persons withdraw an
original expungement request after the
arbitration panel has been made aware
of evidence that could result in the
denial of the expungement request.
18 In 2009, the SEC approved amendments to
Forms U4 and U5 to require, among other things,
the reporting of allegations of sales practice
violations made against unnamed persons. See
Securities Exchange Act Release No. 59916 (May
13, 2009), 74 FR 23750 (May 20, 2009) (Order
Approving File No. SR–FINRA–2009–008).
Specifically, Forms U4 and U5 were amended to
add questions to elicit whether the applicant or
registered person, though not named as a
respondent or defendant in a customer-initiated
arbitration, was either mentioned in or could be
reasonably identified from the body of the
arbitration claim as a registered person who was
involved in one or more of the alleged sales practice
violations.
19 If a broker is not named as a party in the
customer arbitration, brokers may seek to expunge
customer dispute information by: (1) Asking a party
to the arbitration, usually the firm, to request
expungement on his or her behalf; (2) seeking to
intervene in the customer arbitration; (3) initiating
a new arbitration in which the unnamed person
requests expungement and names the customer or
firm as the respondent; or (4) going directly to court
(without first going to arbitration).
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On December 6, 2017, FINRA
published Notice 17–42 20 to seek
comment on a variety of changes to the
process of arbitrating expungement
requests, including establishing a roster
of arbitrators with additional training
and specific backgrounds or experience
from which a panel would be selected
to decide an associated person’s request
for expungement of customer dispute
information. The arbitrators from this
roster would decide straight-in requests.
As discussed below in Item II.C., FINRA
received 70 comment letters on Notice
17–42 that reflected a variety of
perspectives and different suggestions
regarding how to proceed. The proposed
rule change is responsive to concerns
raised by commenters and would
include the following primary changes:
➢ Expungement Requests in
Customer Arbitrations
Æ An associated person named in a
customer arbitration would be required
to request expungement during the
customer arbitration or forfeit the ability
to request expungement of that same
disclosure in any subsequent
proceeding.
Æ A named party from a customer
arbitration would be permitted to
request expungement during the
customer arbitration on-behalf-of an
unnamed person pursuant to specified
conditions and limitations.
Æ If a named associated person or
party on-behalf-of an unnamed person
requests expungement during the
customer arbitration and the arbitration
closes by award after a hearing,21 the
panel from the customer arbitration
would be required to decide the
expungement request during the
customer arbitration and issue a
decision on the request in the award.
Æ If a named associated person or
party on-behalf-of an unnamed person
requests expungement during the
customer arbitration and the arbitration
closes other than by award or by award
without a hearing, an associated person
may only pursue an expungement
request by filing a straight-in request
under the Industry Code against the
member firm at which the associated
person was associated at the time the
dispute arose.
➢ Expungement Requests Under the
Industry Code
Æ All straight-in requests 22 would be
required to be filed under the Industry
20 See
https://www.finra.org/industry/notices/17-
42.
21 Under the Codes, a ‘‘hearing’’ means the
hearing on the merits of the arbitration. See FINRA
Rules 12100(o) and 13100(o).
22 A straight-in request would include a request
to expunge customer dispute information filed
under the Industry Code: (1) By an associated
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Code against the member firm at which
the associated person was associated at
the time the dispute arose and decided
by a panel selected from a roster of
arbitrators with enhanced experience
and training (‘‘Special Arbitrator
Roster’’).
Æ If an associated person withdraws a
straight-in request after a panel from the
Special Arbitrator Roster is appointed,
the case would be closed with
prejudice.
➢ Special Arbitrator Roster
Æ A three-person panel selected from
the Special Arbitrator Roster would
decide straight-in requests.
Æ The parties would not be permitted
to agree to fewer than three arbitrators
from the Special Arbitrator Roster to
decide straight-in requests.
Æ Arbitrators on the Special
Arbitrator Roster would be required to
be public arbitrators who are eligible for
the chairperson roster and who have
fully met the following additional
qualifications: (1) Evidenced successful
completion of, and agreement with,
enhanced expungement training
provided by FINRA; and (2) service as
an arbitrator through award on at least
four customer-initiated arbitrations
administered by FINRA or by another
self-regulatory organization (‘‘SRO’’) in
which a hearing was held.
Æ The Neutral List Selection System
(‘‘NLSS’’) would randomly select the
three public chairpersons from the
Special Arbitrator Roster to decide
straight-in requests. The first arbitrator
selected would be the chair of the panel.
The parties would not be permitted to
stipulate to the use of pre-selected
arbitrators.
Æ An associated person who files a
straight-in request would not be
permitted to strike any arbitrators
selected by NLSS or stipulate to the
arbitrator’s removal, but would be
permitted to challenge any arbitrator
selected for cause. If an arbitrator is
removed, NLSS would randomly select
a replacement.
➢ Time Limitations on Requests for
Expungement
Æ For customer dispute information
reported to the CRD system after the
effective date of the proposed rule
change, the proposal would provide that
person named in a customer arbitration after the
customer arbitration closes other than by award or
by award without a hearing; (2) arising from a
customer complaint or civil litigation rather than a
customer arbitration; or (3) by an associated person
who was the subject of a customer arbitration, but
unnamed, and where a named party in the customer
arbitration did not request expungement on-behalfof the unnamed associated person, or where a
named party made an on-behalf-of request, but the
customer arbitration closed other than by award or
by award without a hearing.
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an associated person would be barred
from requesting expungement if: (1)
More than two years have elapsed since
the close of the customer arbitration or
civil litigation that gave rise to the
customer dispute information; or (2)
there was no customer arbitration or
civil litigation involving the customer
dispute information, and more than six
years have elapsed since the date that
the customer complaint was initially
reported to the CRD system.
Æ For customer dispute information
reported to the CRD system before the
effective date of the proposed rule
change, the proposal would require an
associated person to request
expungement as a straight-in request
under the Industry Code: (1) Within two
years of the effective date of the
proposed rule change for disclosures
that arose from a customer arbitration or
civil litigation that closed on or prior to
the effective date; and (2) within six
years of the effective date of the
proposed rule change for customer
complaints initially reported to the CRD
system on or prior to the effective date.
➢ Expungement Requests During a
Simplified Arbitration
Æ If a party requests expungement
during a simplified arbitration, the
single arbitrator in the simplified
arbitration would be required to decide
the expungement request, regardless of
how the simplified arbitration case
closes (e.g., even if the case settles).
Æ If an associated person does not
request expungement during the
simplified arbitration, the request may
be filed as a straight-in request under
the Industry Code against the member
firm at which the associated person was
associated at the time the dispute arose,
and be decided by a three-person panel
randomly selected from the Special
Arbitrator Roster.
➢ Expungement Hearings
Æ Establish procedural requirements
that arbitrators and parties must follow
for expungement hearings.
➢ State and Customer Notifications
Æ Establish requirements for notifying
state securities regulators and customers
of expungement requests.
Under the proposed rule change, an
associated person would only be
permitted to seek expungement of
customer dispute information in the
arbitration forum administered by
FINRA by complying with the
requirements of proposed Rules 12805
(expungement requests in a customer
arbitration), 13805 (straight-in requests
under the Industry Code) or 12800(d)
(expungement requests in a simplified
customer arbitration).
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62145
The proposed rule change, as revised
in response to comments on Notice 17–
42, is set forth in further detail below.23
(II) Proposed Rule Change
The discussion below of the proposed
rule change is divided into six areas: (A)
Requests for expungement under the
Customer Code; (B) straight-in requests
under the Industry Code and the Special
Arbitrator Roster; (C) limitations on
expungement requests; (D) procedural
requirements related to all expungement
hearings; (E) notifications to customers
and states regarding expungement
requests; and (F) expungement requests
during simplified customer arbitrations.
A. Requests for Expungement Under the
Customer Code
FINRA Rule 12805 provides a list of
requirements that arbitrators must meet
before they may recommend
expungement.24 The rule does not,
however, provide guidance for
associated persons on how and when
they may request expungement during
the customer arbitration, or on when
arbitrators must make expungement
determinations. The proposed rule
change would amend FINRA Rule
12805 to set forth requirements for
expungement requests filed by an
associated person during a customer
arbitration.
1. Expungement Requests During the
Customer Arbitration
a. By a Respondent Named in a
Customer Arbitration
Under current practice, an associated
person who is named as a respondent in
a customer arbitration (‘‘named
associated person’’) may request
expungement at any time during the
customer arbitration or separately from
the customer arbitration in a straight-in
request.25 If a named associated person
23 The proposed rule change would apply to all
members, including members that are funding
portals or have elected to be treated as capital
acquisition brokers (‘‘CABs’’), given that the
funding portal and CAB rule sets incorporate the
impacted FINRA rules by reference.
24 FINRA Rule 12805 provides that a panel must
comply with the following criteria before
recommending expungement: (1) Hold a recorded
hearing to decide the issue of expungement; (2)
review settlement documents, and consider the
amount of payments made to any party and any
other terms and conditions of the settlement; (3)
indicate in the award which of the grounds in
FINRA Rule 2080 is the basis for expungement and
provide a brief written explanation of the reasons
for recommending expungement; and (4) assess all
forum fees for hearing sessions in which the sole
topic is the determination of the appropriateness of
expungement against the parties requesting
expungement. See also FINRA Rule 13805.
25 There are several ways in which a named
associated person may request expungement during
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requests expungement during the
customer arbitration, does not withdraw
the request and the case goes to hearing
and closes by award, the panel in the
customer arbitration will also decide the
expungement request and include the
decision as part of the customer’s
award.26 If the customer arbitration does
not close by award after a hearing (e.g.,
settles), and the associated person
continues to pursue the expungement
request, the panel from the customer
arbitration may hold an expungementonly hearing as required by FINRA Rule
12805 to decide the expungement
request.
Under the proposed rule change, if a
named associated person seeks to
request expungement of customer
dispute information arising from the
customer’s statement of claim, the
named associated person must make the
expungement request during the
customer arbitration.27 As discussed
below, the request would be subject to
limitations on how and when the
request may be made.28 In addition, the
Director would be authorized to deny
the forum to expungement requests
during a customer arbitration that do
not arise out of the customer
arbitration.29 If the associated person
does not request expungement during
the customer arbitration, he or she
would forfeit the opportunity to seek
expungement of the same customer
dispute information in any subsequent
proceeding.30
a customer arbitration. The request may be included
in the answer to the statement of claim that must
be submitted within 45 days of receipt of the
statement of claim, and may include other claims
and remedies requested. See FINRA Rules 12303(a)
and (b); see also FINRA Rules 13303(a) and (b). The
expungement request may also be included in other
pleadings (e.g., a counterclaim, a cross claim, or a
third party claim) and must be filed with the
Director of the Office of Dispute Resolution
(‘‘Director’’) through the Party Portal. See FINRA
Rules 12100(x) and 12300(b). The associated person
may also request at any time during the case
(outside of a pleading) that the panel consider the
person’s expungement request during the hearing.
Under FINRA Rule 12503, such a request is treated
like a motion, which gives the other parties an
opportunity to object. If there is an objection, the
panel must decide the motion pursuant to FINRA
Rule 12503(d)(5). See also FINRA Rules 13503 and
13503(d)(5).
26 Under the Codes, a customer’s or claimant’s
damage request determines whether a single
arbitrator or a three-person panel will consider and
decide an arbitration case. See FINRA Rules 12401
and 13401. For ease of reference, when discussing
expungement requests during customer arbitrations
under proposed Rule 12805, unless otherwise
specified, the rule filing uses the term ‘‘panel’’ to
mean either a panel or single arbitrator.
27 See proposed Rule 12805(a)(1)(A).
28 See also infra Item II.A.1.(II)C., ‘‘Limitations on
Expungement Requests.’’
29 See proposed Rules 12203(b) and 12805(a).
30 See proposed Rule 12805(a).
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FINRA is proposing to require that a
named associated person request
expungement during the customer
arbitration because, if the arbitration
closes by award after a hearing, the
panel from the customer arbitration will
be best situated to decide the related
issue of expungement. Requiring the
named associated person to request
expungement in the customer
arbitration increases the likelihood that
a panel will have input from all parties
and access to all of the evidence,
testimony and other documents to make
an informed decision on the
expungement request.
FINRA recognizes that this
requirement could result in some named
associated persons filing expungement
requests to preserve their right to make
a request, regardless of the potential
outcome. FINRA believes that the
potential costs that would be incurred
by associated persons, arbitrators and
the forum if named associated persons
file expungement requests to preserve
the ability to request expungement are
appropriate given the potential benefit
of having customer input and a
complete factual record for the panel to
decide an expungement request. In
addition, certain aspects of the proposed
rule change may limit the filing of
requests without regard to the potential
outcome. For example, under the
proposed rule change, named associated
persons would be permitted to request
expungement no later than 30 days
before the first scheduled hearing.31
This proposed amendment would
provide the named associated person
with a reasonable amount of time to
consider, likely after receiving any
discovery from the claimant, whether to
file the request because it could meet
one or more of the FINRA Rule
2080(b)(1) grounds for expungement.32
i. Method of Requesting Expungement
The proposed rule change would limit
how and when expungement requests
may be made during the customer
arbitration. Under the proposed rule
change, if a named associated person
requests expungement during the
customer arbitration, the request must
be included in the answer or a pleading
requesting expungement.33 If the
request is included in the answer, it
must be filed within 45 days of receipt
of the customer’s statement of claim in
31 See proposed Rule 12805(a)(1)(C); see also infra
Item II.A.1.(II)A.1.a.i., ‘‘Method of Requesting
Expungement.’’
32 In addition, FINRA notes that the SEC has
approved changes to FINRA rules to apply
minimum fees to expungement requests. See supra
note 17.
33 See proposed Rule 12805(a)(1)(C)(i).
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accordance with existing requirements
under the Codes.34 If the named
associated person requests expungement
in a pleading requesting expungement,
the request must be filed no later than
30 days before the first scheduled
hearing begins.35
FINRA believes the proposed rule
change would provide a reasonable
amount of time for the requesting party
to make an informed decision about
whether to request expungement while
also providing the parties with
reasonable case-preparation time, since
the expungement issues will overlap
with the issues raised by the customer’s
claim.
In addition, the proposed filing
deadline would provide the Director a
reasonable amount of time to notify
state securities regulators of the
expungement request.36 If a named
associated person seeks to request
expungement after the 30-day filing
deadline, the panel would be required
to decide whether to grant an extension
and permit the request or whether to
deny the request for expungement.37
ii. Required Contents of an
Expungement Request
Under the proposed rule change, a
request for expungement by a named
associated person in a customer
arbitration must include the applicable
filing fee under the Codes.38 In addition,
a named associated person would be
required to provide the CRD number of
the party requesting expungement, each
CRD occurrence number that is the
subject of the request and the case name
and docket number that gave rise to the
disclosure, if applicable.39
The proposed rule change would also
require the party requesting
expungement to explain whether
expungement of the same customer
dispute information was (i) previously
requested and, if so (ii) how it was
34 See
supra note 25.
proposed Rule 12805(a)(1)(C)(i).
36 See proposed Rule 12805(b); see also infra Item
II.A.1.(II)E.3., ‘‘State Notification of Expungement
Requests.’’
37 See proposed Rule 12805(a)(1)(C). The
proposed amendments would provide that if the
expungement request is not filed in a pleading no
later than 30 days before the first scheduled
hearing, then FINRA Rule 12309(b) would require
the associated person to file a motion pursuant to
FINRA Rule 12503, seeking an extension of the 30day deadline to file the expungement request.
38 See proposed Rule 12805(a)(1)(C)(ii)a.; see also
supra note 17.
39 See proposed Rule 12805(a)(1)(C)(ii)b.–d. An
occurrence is a disclosure event that is reported to
the CRD system via one or more Disclosure
Reporting Pages. Each occurrence contains details
regarding a specific disclosure event. An occurrence
can have as many as three sources reporting the
same event: Forms U4, U5 and U6.
35 See
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decided.40 This requirement would
assist with implementation of the
proposed prohibition on parties making
second requests for expungement,
discussed in more detail below.41 This
proposed requirement is also consistent
with language in the existing Guidance
stating that arbitrators should ask a
party requesting expungement whether
an arbitration panel or a court
previously denied expungement of the
customer dispute information at issue
and, if there was a prior denial, to deny
the expungement request.42
Under the proposed rule change, if an
expungement request fails to include
any of the proposed requirements for
requesting expungement, the request
would be considered deficient and
would not be served unless the
deficiency is corrected.43 These
requirements would help ensure that
FINRA, the panel and the parties
understand who is requesting
expungement and which disclosure is
the subject of the request. Further, if the
disclosure arose from a customer
arbitration, the case name and docket
number would provide the panel that is
considering the expungement request
with information about the dispute that
gave rise to the disclosure that the party
is seeking to expunge.
FINRA believes these proposed
requirements for parties requesting
expungement are necessary for the
timely and orderly consideration of
expungement requests as well as to
maintain the integrity of the data in the
CRD system.
b. Expungement Requests by a Party
Named in the Customer Arbitration OnBehalf-Of an Unnamed Person
The Codes do not specifically address
expungement requests by a party named
in a customer arbitration on-behalf-of an
unnamed person.44 Under current
practice, a party to a customer
arbitration may file an on-behalf-of
request for expungement during the
customer arbitration. If the party
(typically, a firm) files the request and
40 See
proposed Rule 12805(a)(1)(C)(ii)e.
infra Item II.A.1.(II)A.1.b.i., ‘‘Method of
Requesting Expungement On-Behalf-Of an
Unnamed Person.’’
42 See supra note 3.
43 See proposed Rule 12307(a)(8)–(11) (setting
forth reasons a claim may be deficient).
44 The proposed rule change would define an
unnamed person as ‘‘an associated person,
including a formerly associated person, who is
identified in a Form U4, Form U5, or Form U6, as
having been the subject of an investment-related,
customer-initiated arbitration claim that alleged
that the associated person or formerly associated
person was involved in one or more sales practice
violations, but who was not named as a respondent
in the arbitration claim.’’ See proposed Rule
12100(ff).
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41 See
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the customer arbitration closes by award
after a hearing, the panel will decide the
expungement request and include the
decision in the award. If the customer
arbitration does not close by award after
a hearing (e.g., settles), either the
requesting party or the unnamed person
could ask the panel to consider and
decide the expungement request before
it disbands. In this circumstance, the
panel from the customer arbitration will
hold a separate expungement-only
hearing to decide the expungement
request.
The proposed rule change would
codify the ability of a party in the
customer arbitration to file an on-behalfof request during a customer
arbitration.45 Under the proposed rule
change, a party to a customer arbitration
may file an on-behalf-of request that
seeks to expunge customer dispute
information arising from the customer’s
statement of claim, provided the request
is eligible for arbitration under proposed
Rule 12805.46 Filing an on-behalf-of
request would be permissive, not
mandatory.47 However, as discussed
below, if the named party and the
unnamed person agree to such a request,
FINRA would require them to sign a
form consenting to the on-behalf-of
request which would help ensure that
the unnamed person is fully aware of
the request and that the firm is agreeing
to represent the unnamed person for the
purpose of requesting expungement
during the customer arbitration.48
i. Method of Requesting Expungement
On-Behalf-Of an Unnamed Person
The unnamed person would be
required to consent to the on-behalf-of
request in writing.49 In particular, the
party filing an on-behalf-of request
would be required to submit a signed
Form Requesting Expungement on
Behalf of an Unnamed Person (‘‘Form’’)
and a statement requesting
expungement with the Director.50 The
proposed Rule 12805(a)(2).
proposed Rule 12805(a)(2)(B).
47 See proposed Rule 12805(a)(2)(A).
48 A customer complaint can be reported to the
CRD system via a Form U4 or Form U5. Pursuant
to FINRA Rule 1010, an associated person should
be made aware of the filing of a Form U4 and any
amendments thereto by the associated person’s
member firm. In addition, Article V, Section 3 of
the FINRA By-Laws of the Corporation requires that
a member firm provide an associated person a copy
of an amended Form U5, including one reporting
a customer complaint involving the associated
person. FINRA also provides several methods for
associated persons and former associated persons to
check their records (e.g., by requesting an
Individual CRD Snapshot or online through
BrokerCheck).
49 See proposed Rule 12805(a)(2)(A).
50 See proposed Rule 12805(a)(2)(C)(ii). The
unnamed person whose CRD record would be
62147
proposed rule change would not require
that an on-behalf-of request be included
in an answer or pleading requesting
expungement (although it could be),
since the request seeks relief on-behalfof a person who is not a party to the
arbitration. However, the party making
the request would be required to serve
the request, which would include the
Form, on all parties no later than 30
days before the first scheduled
hearing.51
FINRA believes that requiring
submission of the Form would help
address the issue of an unnamed person
not being notified of the on-behalf-of
request. As discussed above, FINRA is
concerned that some associated persons
are filing arbitration claims seeking
expungement of the same customer
dispute information that was the subject
of a previous denial by a panel of an onbehalf-of request. By signing the Form,
the unnamed person would be
consenting to the on-behalf-of request
and agreeing to be bound by the panel’s
decision on the request.52 In addition,
the Form would provide that, if the
customer arbitration closes by award
after a hearing, the unnamed person
would be barred from filing a request for
expungement for the same customer
dispute information in a subsequent
proceeding, and the unnamed person’s
signature would serve as
acknowledgement of this consequence.
ii. Required Contents of an On-Behalf-Of
Expungement Request
Under the proposed rule change, an
on-behalf-of request would be required
to include the same elements as a
request for expungement by a named
associated person during a customer
arbitration.53 Thus, the party requesting
expungement on-behalf-of an unnamed
person (typically, the firm) would be
required to provide the applicable filing
fee, the CRD number of the unnamed
person, each CRD occurrence number
that is the subject of the request and the
45 See
46 See
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expunged and the party requesting expungement on
the unnamed person’s behalf must sign the Form.
51 See proposed Rule 12805(a)(2)(C)(iii). The 30day deadline is the same as the proposed deadline
for a named associated person to request
expungement in a customer arbitration.
52 By signing the Form, the unnamed person
would also be agreeing to maintain the
confidentiality of documents and information from
the customer arbitration to which the unnamed
person is given access and to adhere to any
confidentiality agreements or orders associated with
the customer arbitration. See proposed Rule
12805(a)(2)(D). Failure of the unnamed person to
comply with this provision could subject the
unnamed person to a claim for damages by an
aggrieved party.
53 See proposed Rule 12805(a)(1)(C)(ii); see also
supra Item II.A.1.(II)A.1.a.ii., ‘‘Required Contents of
an Expungement Request.’’
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case name and docket number that gave
rise to the disclosure, if applicable. In
addition, as discussed above, the party
requesting expungement would be
required to include the Form, signed by
the unnamed person whose CRD record
would be expunged and the party filing
the request.
c. Deciding Expungement Requests
During Customer Arbitrations
The proposed amendments would
require that if there is a request for
expungement by a named associated
person or on-behalf-of an unnamed
person during a customer arbitration,
the panel from the customer arbitration
must decide the expungement request if
the customer arbitration closes by award
after a hearing.54 If the customer
arbitration closes other than by award
(e.g., settles) or by award without a
hearing, the panel would not consider
the expungement request.55 Instead, the
associated person would have the
option of filing a request to expunge the
same customer dispute information as a
new claim under proposed Rule 13805
against the member firm at which he or
she was associated at the time the
customer dispute arose.56 A panel from
the Special Arbitrator Roster would
decide such an expungement request, as
discussed in more detail below.57
associated person has the option to file
the request again at a later date.
Under the proposed rule change, if,
during the customer arbitration, a
named associated person requests
expungement or a party files an onbehalf-of request, and the customer’s
claim closes by award after a hearing,
the panel in the customer arbitration
would be required to consider and
decide the request for expungement
during the customer arbitration and
issue a decision on the expungement
request in the award.59 The panel would
be required to decide the request even
if the requesting party withdraws the
request or fails to present a case in
support of the request. In this instance,
the panel must deny the expungement
request with prejudice.60 This
requirement would foreclose the ability
of associated persons to withdraw
expungement requests to avoid having
their requests decided by the panel who
heard the evidence on the customer’s
arbitration claim, and then seeking to refile the request and receive a new list of
arbitrators and a potentially more
favorable decision.
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ii. Panel Does Not Decide Expungement
if the Customer’s Claim Closes Other
Than by Award or by Award Without a
Hearing
Currently, if a named associated
person requests expungement or a party
i. Panel Decides the Expungement
files an on-behalf-of request and the
Request if the Customer’s Claim Closes
customer arbitration does not close by
by Award After a Hearing
award after a hearing (e.g., settles) and
Currently, if a named associated
the associated person or requesting
person requests expungement, or a party party, if it is an on-behalf-of request,
files an on-behalf-of request, and the
continues to pursue the expungement
customer’s claim closes by award after
request, the panel from the customer
a hearing, the panel may consider and
arbitration will hold a separate
decide the expungement request during expungement-only hearing to consider
the customer arbitration and issue its
and decide the expungement request. If
decision in the award. If, however, the
the named associated person or party
requesting expungement does not
party requesting expungement does not
request that the panel hold a separate,
raise the issue of expungement during
expungement-only hearing, the panel
the hearing, the panel will not decide
the request and may deem it withdrawn may deem the request withdrawn
without prejudice.58 In this instance, the without prejudice, and the associated
person has the option to file the request
54 See proposed Rule 12805(a)(1)(D)(i) and
again at a later date.
The proposed rule change would
(a)(2)(E)(i).
55 See proposed Rules 12805(a)(1)(D)(ii) and
provide that if, during a customer
(a)(2)(E)(ii).
arbitration, a named associated person
56 See supra note 54. Under the Codes, a
requests expungement or a party files an
‘‘member’’ includes any broker or dealer admitted
on-behalf-of request and the customer
to membership in FINRA, whether or not the
arbitration closes other than by award or
membership has been terminated, suspended,
cancelled, revoked, the member has been expelled
or barred from FINRA or the member is otherwise
defunct. See FINRA Rules 12100(s) and 13100(q);
see also Securities Exchange Act Release No. 88254
(February 20, 2020), 85 FR 11157 (February 26,
2020) (Order Approving File No. SR–FINRA–2019–
027).
57 See infra Item II.A.1.(II)B.2., ‘‘Panel from the
Special Arbitrator Roster Decides Requests Filed
Under the Industry Code.’’
58 See FINRA Rules 12702 and 13702.
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59 See proposed Rules 12805(a)(1)(D)(i) and
12805(a)(2)(E)(i).
60 See proposed Rules 12805(a)(1)(D)(i) and
12805(a)(2)(E)(i). A party requesting expungement
on-behalf-of an unnamed person may withdraw or
not pursue an expungement request only with the
written consent of the unnamed person. Under such
circumstances, the panel would deny the
expungement request with prejudice. See proposed
Rule 12805(a)(2)(E)(i).
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by award without a hearing, the panel
from the customer arbitration would not
be permitted to decide the expungement
request.61 Instead, the associated person
would be required to seek expungement
by filing a request to expunge the same
customer dispute information as a
straight-in request under proposed Rule
13805, where a panel from the Special
Arbitrator Roster would decide the
request.62
As discussed above, expungement
requests may be complex to resolve,
particularly straight-in requests where
customers typically do not participate in
the expungement hearing. Thus, having
three arbitrators available to ask
questions, request evidence and to serve
generally as fact-finders in the absence
of customer input would help ensure
that a complete factual record is created
to support the arbitrators’ decision in
such expungement hearings.
FINRA believes this is the right
approach because the panel selected by
the parties in the customer arbitration
has not heard the full merits of the case
and, therefore, may not bring to bear any
special insights in determining whether
to recommend expungement. In
addition, customers or their
representative have little incentive to
participate in an expungement hearing
once their case has settled. Requiring
that an associated person file the
expungement request as a straight-in
request under the Industry Code to be
heard and decided by a three-person
panel selected from the Special
Arbitrator Roster would strengthen the
expungement framework. As discussed
in more detail below, this corps of
specially trained arbitrators would
follow the procedures set forth in
proposed Rule 13805 and make a
decision about whether FINRA Rule
2080(b)(1) grounds exist to recommend
expungement, keeping in mind the
importance of maintaining the integrity
of information in the CRD system.
2. No Straight-In Requests Against
Customers
The proposed amendments would
prohibit an associated person from filing
a straight-in request against a
customer.63 Currently, straight-in
requests are rarely filed against a
customer.64 FINRA does not believe that
61 See proposed Rules 12805(a)(1)(D)(ii)a. and
12805(a)(2)(E)(ii)a.
62 See infra Item II.A.1.(II)B.2., ‘‘Panel from the
Special Arbitrator Roster Decides Requests Filed
Under the Industry Code.’’
63 See proposed Rules 12805(a)(1)(D)(ii)c. and
12805(a)(2)(E)(ii)c.
64 From January 2016 through June 2019, FINRA
is able to identify 5,718 requests to expunge
customer dispute information. Of those, 3,114 were
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customers should be compelled to
participate in a separate proceeding to
decide an expungement request after the
customer has resolved his or her
arbitration claim or civil litigation, or
submitted his or her customer
complaint. Accordingly, the proposed
amendments would prohibit an
associated person from filing a straightin request against a customer.
3. No Intervening in Customer
Arbitrations To Request Expungement
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The proposed amendments would
also prohibit unnamed persons from
intervening in a customer arbitration
and requesting expungement.65 If the
associated person is neither a party to
the arbitration nor the subject of an onbehalf-of request by another party to the
arbitration, the associated person should
not be able to intervene in the
customers’ arbitration to request
expungement. In these circumstances,
the associated person’s conduct is
unlikely to be fully addressed by the
parties during the customer arbitration,
and FINRA does not believe that the
customer should have the presentation
of their case interrupted by an
associated person’s intervention to
request expungement. In addition, there
have been instances in customer
arbitrations in which the unnamed
person learns that the customer’s
arbitration case is nearing conclusion.
The associated person (or his or her
representative) then files a motion to
intervene in the case to ask the panel to
consider recommending expungement.
As an unnamed person, the individual
is not a party to the case and, therefore,
has not made any arguments in support
of the expungement request. Further, if
the motion is granted, the parties to the
case will be required to wait for a
decision on the expungement request
(which may necessitate another hearing)
before their dispute is resolved, causing
delay and additional cost to the parties.
Accordingly, under the proposed rule
change, associated persons would be
prohibited from intervening in a
customer arbitration and requesting
expungement. Instead, the unnamed
person would have the option to file the
request as a new claim under proposed
Rule 13805, where a panel from the
Special Arbitrator Roster would decide
the request.66
filed as straight-in requests; 66 of the straight-in
requests were filed solely against a customer. See
infra Item II.B.2., ‘‘Economic Baseline.’’
65 See proposed Rule 12805(a)(2)(E)(iii).
66 See infra Item II.A.1.(II)B.2., ‘‘Panel from the
Special Arbitrator Roster Decides Requests Filed
Under the Industry Code.’’
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B. Straight-In Requests and the Special
Arbitrator Roster
Under the proposed rule change, all
requests to expunge disclosures arising
from customer complaints or civil
litigations would be required to be made
as straight-in requests under proposed
Rule 13805.67 In addition, an associated
person could request expungement of
customer dispute information arising
from a customer arbitration under
proposed Rule 13805 if: (1) The
associated person is named in the
arbitration or is the subject of an onbehalf-of request and the customer
arbitration closes other than by award or
by award without a hearing; or (2) the
associated person is the subject of a
customer arbitration, but is neither
named in the arbitration nor the subject
of an on-behalf-of request, and the
customer arbitration closes for any
reason. If an associated person requests
expungement under proposed Rule
13805, a three-person panel selected
from the Special Arbitrator Roster in
accordance with proposed Rule 13806,
would decide the expungement
request.68
1. Filing a Straight-In Request Under the
Industry Code
a. Applicability
Under the proposed rule change, an
associated person requesting
expungement of customer dispute
information under the Industry Code
must make a straight-in request by filing
a statement of claim in accordance with
FINRA Rule 13302 against a member
firm at which he or she was associated
at the time the customer dispute arose,
unless the request is ineligible for
arbitration under proposed Rule
13805(a)(2).69 Thus, the only way to
request expungement of customer
dispute information under the Industry
Code would be to file the request under
proposed Rule 13805.
The requirement that the associated
person file the straight-in request
against the member firm at which he or
she was associated at the time the
customer dispute arose would help
ensure that there is a connection
between the respondent firm and the
subject of the expungement request. For
example, the firm at which the person
requesting expungement was associated
67 See
proposed Rule 13805(a)(1).
infra Item II.A.1.(II)B.2.a. and b. (discussing
eligibility requirements for and composition of the
Special Arbitrator Roster).
69 See proposed Rule 13805(a)(1). FINRA Rule
13302 provides, in relevant part, that to initiate an
arbitration, a claimant must file with the Director
a signed and dated Submission Agreement, and a
statement of claim specifying the relevant facts and
remedies requested through the Party Portal.
68 See
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62149
at the time the dispute arose should
have knowledge of the dispute and
access to documents or other evidence
relating to the dispute. In addition, the
proposed requirement would help
ensure that the panel from the Special
Arbitrator Roster would be able to
request evidence from a member firm
with information that is relevant to the
expungement request. If the requisite
connection is not present, the Director
would be authorized to deny the forum
to the request.70
b. Required Contents of Straight-In
Requests
The required contents of a straight-in
request would be the same as those
required for expungement requests filed
under proposed Rule 12805.71 Thus, the
associated person’s straight-in request
would be required to contain the
applicable filing fee; 72 the CRD number
of the party requesting expungement;
each CRD occurrence number that is the
subject of the request; the case name
and docket number that gave rise to the
disclosure, if applicable; and an
explanation of whether expungement of
the same customer dispute information
was previously requested and, if so,
how it was decided.73 In addition, as
discussed below, the proposed rule
change would impose limitations on
when such requests may be made.74
2. Panel From the Special Arbitrator
Roster Decides Requests Filed Under the
Industry Code
If a straight-in request is filed in
accordance with proposed Rule 13805,
a three-person panel selected from the
70 See
proposed Rule 13203(b).
supra Item II.A.1.(II)A.1.a.ii., ‘‘Required
Contents of an Expungement Request.’’
72 FINRA would not assess a second filing fee
when an associated person files a straight-in request
if the associated person or the requesting party in
the case of an on-behalf-of request, had previously
paid the filing fee to request expungement of the
same customer dispute information during a
customer arbitration.
73 See proposed Rule 13805(a)(3).
74 See infra Item II.A.1.(II)C., ‘‘Limitations on
Expungement Requests.’’ As discussed in more
detail below in Item II.A.1.(II)C., the straight-in
request would be ineligible for arbitration under the
Industry Code if: (1) A panel held a hearing to
consider the merits of the associated person’s
request for expungement of the same customer
dispute information; (2) a court previously denied
the associated person’s request to expunge the same
customer dispute information; (3) the customer
arbitration, civil litigation or customer complaint
that gave rise to the customer dispute information
is not concluded; (4) more than two years has
elapsed since the customer arbitration or civil
litigation that gave rise to the customer dispute
information has closed; or (5) there was no
customer arbitration or civil litigation that gave rise
to the customer dispute information and more than
six years has elapsed since the date that the
customer complaint was initially reported to the
CRD system. See proposed Rule 13805(a)(2).
71 See
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Special Arbitrator Roster pursuant to
proposed Rule 13806 would be required
to hold an expungement hearing, decide
the expungement request and issue an
award.75 The proposed amendments
would also provide that if the associated
person withdraws or does not pursue
the request, the panel would be required
to deny the expungement request with
prejudice.76 This requirement would
foreclose the ability of associated
persons to withdraw expungement
requests to avoid having their requests
decided by the panel, and then seeking
to re-file the request with the hope of
obtaining a potentially more favorable
panel.
The proposed rule change would
include several requirements to help
ensure that arbitrators on the Special
Arbitrator Roster have the qualifications
and training to decide straight-in
requests.
a. Eligibility Requirements for the
Special Arbitrator Roster
Arbitrators on the Special Arbitrator
Roster would be public arbitrators who
are eligible for the chairperson roster.77
Public arbitrators are not employed in
the securities industry and do not
devote 20 percent or more of their
professional work to the securities
industry or to parties in disputes
concerning investment accounts or
transactions or employment
relationships within the financial
industry.78 Arbitrators are eligible for
the chairperson roster if they have
completed chairperson training
provided by FINRA and: (1) Have a law
degree and are a member of a bar of at
least one jurisdiction and have served as
an arbitrator through award on at least
one arbitration administered by an SRO
in which hearings were held; or (2) have
served as an arbitrator through award on
at least three arbitrations administered
by an SRO in which hearings were
held.79 These requirements would help
ensure that the persons conducting the
expungement hearing are impartial and
experienced in managing and
conducting arbitration hearings in the
forum.80
75 See
proposed Rule 13805(a)(4).
supra note 75.
77 See proposed Rule 13806(b); see also FINRA
Rule 12400(c).
78 See supra note 8.
79 See FINRA Rule 12400(c). For purposes of this
proposed rule change, public arbitrators who are
eligible for the chairperson roster would include
those arbitrators who have met the chairperson
eligibility requirements of FINRA Rule 12400(c),
regardless of whether they have already served as
a chair on an arbitration case.
80 The Task Force suggested that the arbitrators on
its recommended special arbitration panel be chairqualified, in part because of the training that
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76 See
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Further, the public chairpersons must
have evidenced successful completion
of, and agreement with, enhanced
expungement training provided by
FINRA.81 FINRA currently provides an
Expungement Training module for
arbitrators.82 This training, however,
would be expanded for arbitrators
seeking to qualify for the Special
Arbitrator Roster. This would allow
FINRA to further emphasize, with the
subset of arbitrators on the Special
Arbitrator Roster, the unique, distinct
role they play in deciding whether to
recommend a request to expunge
customer dispute information from a
broker’s CRD record, and that
expungement should be granted in
limited circumstances and only if one or
more of the grounds in FINRA Rule
2080(b)(1) is met.
Under the proposed amendments,
arbitrators on the Special Arbitrator
Roster would also be required to have
served as an arbitrator through award on
at least four customer-initiated
arbitrations administered by FINRA or
by another SRO in which a hearing was
held.83 FINRA believes that if an
arbitrator has served on four arbitrations
through to award, it would indicate that
the arbitrator has gained the knowledge
and experience in the forum to conduct
hearings.84
b. Composition of the Panel
The proposed amendments would
require that three randomly-selected
arbitrators must complete before they can be added
to the chairperson roster. See FINRA’s ‘‘Advanced
Arbitrator Training,’’ available at https://
www.finra.org/arbitration-mediation/advancedarbitrator-training. See also supra note 13.
81 See proposed Rule 13806(b)(2)(A).
82 See supra note 80. FINRA requires arbitrators
to take mandatory online training that focuses on
the Guidance. In addition, among other tools,
FINRA provides Neutral Workshops (an online
discussion on specific arbitration topics) and
articles in The Neutral Corner (a quarterly
publication that provides arbitrators and mediators
with updates on important rules and procedures
within the FINRA arbitration forum) to keep
arbitrators informed about the expungement process
and to emphasize the critical role that arbitrators
play in maintaining the relevancy and integrity of
disclosure information in the CRD system and
BrokerCheck. See Neutral Workshop Audio and
Video Files, Spring 2019 Neutral Workshop:
Expungement of Customer Dispute Information,
https://www.finra.org/arbitration-mediation/
neutral-workshop-audio-and-video-files; The
Neutral Corner, https://www.finra.org/arbitrationmediation/neutral-corner-view.
83 See proposed Rule 13806(b)(2)(B). The hearing
requirement would exclude hearings conducted
under the special proceeding option of the
simplified arbitration rules. See FINRA Rule
12800(c)(3)(B).
84 In 2019, 85 percent of FINRA customer
arbitrations closed other than by award. See Dispute
Resolution Statistics, ‘‘How Arbitration Cases
Close,’’ available at https://www.finra.org/
arbitration-mediation/dispute-resolution-statistics.
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members of the Special Arbitrator
Roster decide all expungement requests
filed under proposed Rule 13805.85 As
discussed above, expungement requests
may be complex to resolve, particularly
straight-in requests where customers
typically do not participate in the
expungement hearing. Thus, having
three arbitrators available to ask
questions, request evidence and
generally to serve as fact-finders in the
absence of customer input would help
ensure that a complete factual record is
created to support the arbitrators’
decision in such expungement
hearings.86
To minimize the potential for party
influence in the arbitrator selection
process, the proposed rule change
would require NLSS randomly to select
the three public chairpersons from the
Special Arbitrator Roster to decide an
expungement request filed by an
associated person.87 The parties would
not be permitted to agree to fewer than
three arbitrators. The associated person
would not be permitted to strike any
arbitrators selected by NLSS nor
stipulate to their removal,88 but would
be permitted to challenge any arbitrator
selected for cause.89 If an arbitrator is
removed, NLSS would randomly select
a replacement.90
FINRA believes that the current
process for selecting arbitrators—
striking and combining ranked lists—
would not be appropriate to use to
select arbitrators to decide straight-in
requests.91 In arbitrations outside of the
expungement context, the parties are
typically adverse, which means that
during arbitrator selection, each side
may rank arbitrators on the lists whom
they believe may be favorable to their
case.92 The adversarial nature of the
proceedings serves to minimize the
impact of each party’s influence in
arbitrator selection.93 In contrast, a
85 See
proposed Rule 13806(b)(1).
supra Item II.A.1.(I)C., ‘‘Concerns
Regarding Expungement’’ (discussing the
importance of having a three-person panel decide
straight-in requests).
87 See proposed Rule 13806(b)(1). The first
arbitrator selected would be the chair of the panel.
See proposed Rule 13806(b)(3).
88 The parties also would not be permitted to
stipulate to the use of pre-selected arbitrators (i.e.,
arbitrators that the parties find on their own to use
in their cases). See proposed Rule 13806(b)(1).
89 See proposed Rule 13806(b)(4). In addition,
before the first hearing session begins, the Director
may remove an arbitrator for conflict of interest or
bias, either upon request of a party or on the
Director’s own initiative. See FINRA Rule 12407(a).
90 See proposed Rule 13806(b)(4); see also FINRA
Rules 12402(g) and 12403(g).
91 See generally FINRA Rules 12402 and 12403.
92 See infra note 189.
93 Once the parties have ranked the arbitrators,
the Director creates a combined ranked list of
86 See
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straight-in request filed by an associated
person against a firm may not be
adversarial in nature. In addition,
typically the customer or customer’s
representative will not appear at the
expungement hearing.
FINRA recognizes that the proposed
arbitrator selection process for straightin requests would limit the associated
person and member firm’s input on
arbitration selection. However, the
arbitrators on the Special Arbitrator
Roster would have the experience,
qualifications and training necessary to
conduct a fair and impartial
expungement hearing in accordance
with the proposed rules, and to render
a recommendation based on a complete
factual record developed during the
expungement hearing. FINRA believes
that the higher standards that the
arbitrators must meet to serve on the
Special Arbitrator Roster should
mitigate the impact of the absence of
party input on the selection of
arbitrators. In addition, associated
persons and member firms would still
be permitted to challenge any arbitrator
for cause.94
and, if there has been a prior denial, the
arbitration panel must deny the
expungement request.96
The proposed rule change would
codify the Guidance by providing that
an associated person may not file a
request for expungement of customer
dispute information if (1) a panel held
a hearing to consider the merits of the
associated person’s expungement
request for the same customer dispute
information or (2) a court of competent
jurisdiction previously denied the
associated person’s request to expunge
the same customer dispute
information.97 These proposed
amendments would prevent an
associated person from forum shopping,
or seeking to return to the arbitration
forum administered by FINRA, to garner
a favorable outcome on his or her
expungement request.98
C. Limitations on Expungement
Requests
Currently, Rules 12805 and 13805 do
not address when a party would not be
permitted to file an expungement
request in the forum.95 The Guidance,
however, describes several
circumstances in which an
expungement request should be
ineligible for arbitration. The proposed
rule change would incorporate the
limitations contained in the Guidance as
well as add time limits to when an
associated person may file a straight-in
request.
i. No Straight-In Request if a Customer
Arbitration Has Not Concluded
The Guidance provides that an
associated person may not file a
separate request for expungement of
customer dispute information arising
from a customer arbitration until the
customer arbitration has concluded. The
proposed rule change would codify and
expand upon the Guidance by providing
that an associated person may not file a
straight-in request under proposed Rule
13805 if the customer arbitration, civil
litigation or customer complaint that
gave rise to the customer dispute
information has not closed.99
The proposed rule change would
prevent an associated person from
obtaining a decision on an expungement
request while the customer arbitration is
still ongoing. This change would help
ensure that a decision in the customer
arbitration is issued before the decision
on the expungement request and avoid
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1. Limitations Applicable to Both
Straight-In Requests and Expungement
Requests During a Customer Arbitration
The Guidance provides that if a panel
or a court has issued an award or
decision denying an associated person’s
expungement request, the associated
person may not request expungement of
the same customer dispute information
in another arbitration. In particular, the
Guidance states that arbitrators should
ask a party requesting expungement
whether an arbitration panel or a court
previously denied expungement of the
customer dispute information at issue
arbitrators based on the parties’ numerical rankings.
The Director appoints the highest-ranked available
arbitrator from the combined list. See FINRA Rules
12402(e) and (f) and 12403(d) and (e).
94 See proposed Rule 13806(b)(4).
95 But see supra note 14 (describing time limits
that apply to all arbitration claims, including
expungement requests).
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2. Limitations Applicable to Straight-In
Requests Only
As discussed below, under the
proposed amendments, three additional
limitations would apply to straight-in
requests.
96 See
supra note 3.
proposed Rules 12805(a)(1)(B) and
13805(a)(2)(A). The proposed rule change would
require that the requesting party provide
information about previous expungement requests
and how such requests were decided. See, e.g.,
proposed Rule 12805(a)(1)(C)(ii)e.
98 FINRA notes that if a panel holds a hearing that
addresses the merits of an associated person’s
request for expungement, the Director may deny the
forum to any subsequent request by the associated
person or another party on behalf of the associated
person to expunge the same customer dispute
information. See FINRA Rules 12203(a) and
13203(a); see also proposed Rules 12203(b) and
13203(b).
99 See proposed Rule 13805(a)(2)(A)(iii).
97 See
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62151
the possibility of inconsistent awards.
The proposed amendment would also
help ensure that the arbitrators who will
decide the straight-in request are able to
consider the final factual record from
the customer arbitration.
ii. Time Limits Applicable to
Disclosures Arising After the Effective
Date of the Proposed Rule Change
FINRA is aware that a number of
expungement requests are filed many
years after a customer arbitration closes
or the reporting of a customer complaint
in the CRD system.100 To encourage
timelier filing of expungement requests,
the proposed amendments would
establish time limits for expungement
requests that are specifically tied to the
closure of customer arbitrations and
civil litigations, or the reporting of
customer complaints in the CRD system,
as applicable.101 The proposed time
limits should help encourage customer
participation in expungement
proceedings and help ensure that
straight-in requests are brought before
relevant evidence and testimony
becomes stale or unavailable.102
a. Two Years From the Close of a
Customer Arbitration or Civil Litigation
Under the proposed rule change, an
associated person would be required to
file a straight-in request within two
years of the close of the customer
arbitration or civil litigation that gave
rise to the customer dispute
information.103 A two-year period
would provide a reasonable amount of
time for associated persons and their
firms to gather the documents,
information and other resources
required to file the expungement
request. In addition, the two-year period
would help ensure that the
expungement hearing is held close
enough in time to the customer
arbitration, when information regarding
the customer arbitration is available and
in a timeframe that could increase the
100 See infra Item II.B.3.D., ‘‘Time Limits for
Straight-in Requests—Quantitative Description.’’
101 FINRA Rules 12206 and 13206 provide that no
claim shall be eligible for submission to arbitration
where six years have elapsed from the occurrence
or event giving rise to the claim. Under these Rules,
the panel has discretion to determine if the claim,
including an expungement request, is eligible for
arbitration. See supra note 14. As discussed below,
if the proposed rule change is approved by the
Commission, this six-year eligibility rule would
continue to apply to requests to expunge customer
dispute information that arose prior to the effective
date of the proposed rule change.
102 All customers from a customer arbitration or
civil litigation, and all customers who initiated a
customer complaint, would be notified of the
expungement request and encouraged to attend and
provide their input. See proposed Rule
13805(b)(1)(A).
103 See proposed Rule 13805(a)(2)(A)(iv).
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likelihood for the customer to
participate if he or she chooses to do so.
The shorter timeframe, therefore, could
provide panels with more complete
factual records on which to base their
expungement decisions. At the same
time, it would allow the associated
person time to determine whether to
seek expungement by filing a straight-in
request.
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b. Six Years From the Date a Customer
Complaint Is Reported to the CRD
System
Under the proposed rule change, an
associated person would be prohibited
from filing a straight-in request to
expunge a customer complaint where
more than six years has elapsed since
the customer complaint was initially
reported to the CRD system and there
was no customer arbitration or civil
litigation that gave rise to the customer
dispute information.104
Consistent with FINRA’s current
eligibility rules,105 FINRA believes that
six years from the date a customer
complaint is initially reported to the
CRD system should provide a
reasonable amount of time for the
associated person to bring an
expungement claim. The six-year period
would allow firms to complete their
investigation of the customer complaint
and close it in the CRD system; for the
complaint to evolve, or not evolve, into
an arbitration; and for the associated
person to determine whether to proceed
with a request to expunge the
complaint. The proposed six-year time
limit would also provide a reasonable
time limit to encourage customer
participation and help ensure the
availability of evidence related to
customer complaints.
iii. Time Limits Applicable to
Disclosures Arising On or Prior to the
Effective Date of the Proposed Rule
Change
If the Commission approves the
proposed rule change, the proposal
would also establish time limits for
requests to expunge customer dispute
information arising from customer
arbitrations and civil litigations that
close, and for customer complaints that
were initially reported to the CRD
system, on or prior to the effective date
of the proposed rule change.
Specifically, the proposed
amendments would provide that if an
expungement request is otherwise
eligible under the six-year limitation
period of FINRA Rule 13206(a), an
associated person would be permitted to
104 See
105 See
proposed Rule 13805(a)(2)(A)(v).
supra note 14.
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file a straight-in request under the
Industry Code if: (1) The request for
expungement is made within two years
of the effective date of proposed rule
change, and the disclosure to be
expunged arises from a customer
arbitration or civil litigation that closed
on or prior to the effective date; 106 or
(2) the request for expungement is made
within six years of the effective date of
the proposed rule change, and the
disclosure to be expunged arises from a
customer complaint initially reported to
the CRD system on or prior to its
effective date.107
3. Director’s Authority To Deny the
Forum
If an associated person files an
expungement request that is ineligible
for arbitration under proposed Rules
12805 and 13805, the proposed rule
change would give the Director the
express authority to deny the use of
FINRA’s arbitration forum to decide the
request.108 If the expungement request
is ineligible for arbitration because a
court or panel has decided previously
an expungement request related to the
same customer dispute information, the
Director would deny the forum with
prejudice as the request would be an
attempt to receive a second decision on
a request that had been decided
previously on the merits. The Director
would also deny the forum with
prejudice if an expungement request is
ineligible under the proposed time
limitations.
If the request is ineligible because a
customer arbitration that involves the
same customer dispute information is
not concluded, the Director would deny
the forum without prejudice so that the
associated person could file the request
(or a party could file an on-behalf-of
request) in the customer arbitration or as
a straight-in request after the customer
arbitration concludes.
D. Procedural Requirements Relating to
All Expungement Hearings
The Codes currently provide a list of
requirements panels must follow in
order to decide an expungement
request.109 In addition, the Guidance
provides best practices that arbitrators
should follow when deciding
expungement requests. To guide further
the arbitrators’ decision-making, the
proposed rule change would expand the
106 See
proposed Rule 13805(a)(2)(B)(i).
proposed Rule 13805(a)(2)(B)(ii).
108 See proposed Rules 12203(b) and 13203(b).
The panel would continue to have the authority to
resolve any questions regarding eligibility of such
claims under Rules 12206 and 13206, as applicable.
See supra note 14.
109 See supra note 24.
107 See
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expungement hearing requirements
currently in FINRA Rules 12805 and
13805 to incorporate the relevant
provisions from the Guidance. The
proposed amendments would apply to
all expungement hearings.110
1. Recorded Hearing Sessions
The Codes require a panel that is
deciding an expungement request to
hold a recorded hearing session (by
telephone or in person) regarding the
appropriateness of expungement.111
Consistent with current practice, the
proposed rule change would add the
ability to hold a recorded hearing
session by video conference.112 Further,
the proposed rule change would clarify
that a panel would not be limited in the
number of hearing sessions it should
hold to decide the expungement
request.113
2. Associated Person’s Appearance
The proposed rule change would
require the associated person who is
seeking expungement of the customer
dispute information to appear
personally at the expungement
hearing.114 A party requesting
expungement on behalf of an unnamed
person would also be required to appear
at the hearing. The panel would
determine whether an appearance
should be by telephone, in person, or by
video conference.
As the associated person is requesting
the permanent removal of information
from his or her CRD record, FINRA
believes the associated person whose
CRD record would be expunged must
personally participate in the
expungement hearing to respond to
questions from the panel and those
customers who choose to participate.
Rather than restrict the method of
appearance, FINRA is proposing to
provide the panel with the authority to
decide which method of appearance
would be the most appropriate for the
particular case. FINRA believes that
110 See proposed Rules 12805(c) and 13805(c).
The proposed procedural requirements for
expungement hearings would apply to all
expungement hearings, including hearings held
during a customer arbitration or simplified
arbitration (see infra Item II.A.1.(II)F.,
‘‘Expungement Requests During Simplified
Customer Arbitrations’’) that consider an
expungement request, and expungement hearings
conducted by a panel from the Special Arbitrator
Roster.
111 See FINRA Rules 12805(a) and 13805(a).
112 See proposed Rules 12805(c)(1) and
13805(c)(1).
113 See supra note 112.
114 See proposed Rules 12805(c)(2) and
13805(c)(2). The requirement to appear personally
at the expungement hearing would also apply to an
unnamed person who seeks to have his or her
customer dispute information expunged.
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providing flexibility as to the method of
appearance would encourage
appropriate fact-finding by the
arbitrators and generally strengthen the
process.
3. Customer’s Participation During the
Expungement Hearing
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The Guidance states that it is
important to allow customers and their
representatives to participate in the
expungement hearing if they wish to do
so.115 Specifically, the Guidance
provides that arbitrators should:
• Allow the customers and their
representatives to appear at the
expungement hearing;
• Allow the customer to testify
(telephonically, in person, or other
method) at the expungement hearing;
• Allow the representative for the
customer or a pro se customer to
introduce documents and evidence at
the expungement hearing;
• Allow the representative for the
customer or a pro se customer to crossexamine the broker or other witnesses
called by the party seeking
expungement; and
• Allow the representative for the
customer or a pro se customer to present
opening and closing arguments if the
panel allows any party to present such
arguments.
The proposed rule change would
codify these provisions of the Guidance.
The proposed rule change would make
clear that all customers whose customer
arbitrations, civil litigations and
customer complaints gave rise to the
customer dispute information that is a
subject of the expungement request have
a right to representation and are entitled
to appear at the expungement
hearing.116 The proposed rule change
would provide that the customer can
appear by telephone, in person, by
video conference or other means
convenient to the customer and
customer’s representative.117 By
providing customers with options for
how to participate in hearings, FINRA
115 The Guidance directs arbitrators to permit
customers and their counsel to participate in the
expungement hearing. See supra note 3. FINRA
Rules 12208 and 13208 permit a party to be
represented pro se, by an attorney or by a person
who is not an attorney. The proposed amendments
would replace the term ‘‘counsel’’ with
‘‘representative.’’ See also Securities Arbitration—
Should You Hire an Attorney? (Jan. 3, 2019),
https://www.finra.org/investors/insights/securitiesarbitration.
116 See proposed Rules 12805(c)(3)(A) and
12805(c)(4); see also proposed Rules 13805(c)(3)(A)
and 13805(c)(4). The proposed rule change would
make clear that customers also have the option to
provide their position on the expungement request
in writing in lieu of attending the hearing.
117 See proposed Rules 12805(c)(3)(B) and
13805(c)(3)(B).
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seeks to make it easier for customers to
participate and, thereby, encourage
customer participation. Customer
participation during an expungement
hearing provides the panel with
important information and perspective
that it might not otherwise receive.
In addition, the proposed rule change
would provide that customers must be
allowed to testify at the expungement
hearing and be questioned by the
customer’s representative.118 If a
customer testifies, the associated person
or a party requesting expungement onbehalf-of an unnamed person would be
allowed to cross-examine the
customer.119 Similarly, the customer or
customer’s representative would be
permitted to cross-examine the
associated person or party requesting
expungement on-behalf-of an unnamed
person and any witnesses called by the
associated person or party requesting
expungement on-behalf-of an unnamed
person during the expungement
hearing.120 If the customer introduces
any evidence at the expungement
hearing, the associated person or party
requesting expungement on-behalf-of an
unnamed person could object to the
introduction of the evidence, and the
panel would decide any objections.121
The customer or customer’s
representative would also be permitted
to present opening and closing
arguments if the panel permits any party
to present such arguments.122 FINRA
believes the proposal strikes the right
balance of allowing the customer to
participate fully in the hearing and
giving the associated person or party
requesting expungement on-behalf-of an
unnamed person the opportunity to
substantiate arguments in support of the
expungement request.
4. Panel Requests for Additional
Documents or Evidence
Arbitrators on the panel do not
conduct their own research when
hearing an arbitration case; instead, they
review the materials provided by the
parties. If they need more information,
they can request it from the parties.123
In deciding an expungement request,
particularly in cases that settle before an
evidentiary hearing or in cases where
the customer does not participate in the
118 See proposed Rules 12805(c)(5)(A) and
13805(c)(5)(A).
119 See supra note 118.
120 See proposed Rules 12805(c)(5)(C) and
13805(c)(5)(C).
121 See proposed Rules 12805(c)(5)(B) and
13805(c)(5)(B).
122 See proposed Rules 12805(c)(5)(D) and
13805(c)(5)(D).
123 See proposed Rules 12805(c)(6) and
13805(c)(6).
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expungement hearing, the arbitrator’s
role as fact-finder is critical. Given this
significant role, arbitrators must ensure
that they have all of the information
necessary to make a fully-informed
decision on the expungement request on
the basis of a complete factual record.
Thus, the proposed rule change would
codify the ability of arbitrators to
request from the associated person, or
other party requesting expungement,
any documentary, testimonial or other
evidence that they deem relevant to the
expungement request.124
5. Review of Settlement Documents
Current FINRA Rule 12805(b)
provides that, in the event the parties
from the customer arbitration settle their
case, the panel considering the
expungement request must review the
settlement documents and consider the
amount of payments made to any party
and any other terms and conditions of
the settlement.125 The proposed rule
change would retain this
requirement.126
In addition, the Guidance encourages
arbitrators to inquire and fully consider
whether a party conditioned a
settlement of the arbitration upon
agreement not to oppose the request for
expungement in cases in which the
customer does not participate in the
expungement hearing or the requesting
party states that a customer has
indicated that he or she will not oppose
the expungement request. The proposed
rule change would codify this language
in the Guidance.127 Conditioned
settlements violate FINRA Rule 2081
and may be grounds to deny an
expungement request.128
124 See supra note 123. The Guidance also
suggests that arbitrators should ask the associated
person seeking expungement or the party seeking
expungement on an associated person’s behalf to
provide a current copy of the BrokerCheck report
for the person whose record would be expunged,
paying particular attention to the ‘‘Disclosure
Events’’ section of the report. See supra note 3.
FINRA continues to encourage arbitrators to request
a current copy of the associated person’s
BrokerCheck report.
125 The panel should review all settlement
documents related to the customer dispute
information the associated person is seeking to be
expunged, regardless of whether the associated
person was a party to the settlement.
126 See proposed Rules 12805(c)(7) and
13805(c)(7).
127 See proposed Rules 12805(c)(7) and
13805(c)(7).
128 FINRA Rule 2081 provides that no member
firm or associated person shall condition or seek to
condition settlement of a dispute with a customer
on, or to otherwise compensate the customer for,
the customer’s agreement to consent to, or not to
oppose, the member’s or associated person’s request
to expunge such customer dispute information from
the CRD system. See also Prohibited Conditions
Relating to Expungement of Customer Dispute
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6. Awards
Current FINRA Rules 12805(c) and
13805(c) require that the panel indicate
in the arbitration award which of the
FINRA Rule 2080 grounds for
expungement serves as the basis for its
expungement recommendation and
provide a brief written explanation of
the reasons for its finding that one or
more FINRA Rule 2080 grounds for
expungement applies to the facts of the
case. The proposed rule change would
retain this requirement, but would
remove the word ‘‘brief’’ to indicate to
the panel that it must provide enough
detail in the award to explain its
rationale for recommending
expungement.129 As the Guidance
suggests, the explanation must be
complete and not solely a recitation of
one of the FINRA Rule 2080 grounds or
language provided in the expungement
request.
In addition, the proposed rule change
would incorporate language from the
Guidance that the panel’s explanation
should identify any specific
documentary, testimonial or other
evidence relied on in recommending
expungement.130
The proposed rule change would also
make clarifying revisions to FINRA
Rules 12805(c) and 13805(c). The
proposed amendments would indicate
that the FINRA Rule 2080 grounds that
the panel must indicate serve as the
basis for the expungement order are the
grounds found in paragraph (b)(1) of
FINRA Rule 2080.131 The proposed
amendments would also provide that
the panel would ‘‘recommend’’ rather
than ‘‘grant’’ expungement.132
7. Forum Fees
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The proposed rule change would
retain the current requirements in
FINRA Rules 12805(d) and 13805(d)
that addresses how forum fees are
assessed in expungement hearings.133
Specifically, the panel must assess
against the parties requesting
expungement all forum fees for each
Information FAQ, https://www.finra.org/arbitrationmediation/faq/prohibited-conditions-relatingexpungement-customer-dispute-information.
129 In addition, all awards rendered under the
Codes, including awards recommending
expungement, must comply with the requirements
of FINRA Rules 12904 or 13904.
130 See proposed Rules 12805(c)(8) and
13805(c)(8).
131 See infra note 238, and accompanying text.
132 The word ‘‘recommend’’ more accurately
describes the panel’s role in the expungement
process, consistent with FINRA’s longstanding
practice to state in expungement awards that the
arbitrators ‘‘recommend,’’ rather than ‘‘grant,’’
expungement. See supra note 10.
133 See proposed Rules 12805(c)(9) and
13805(c)(9).
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hearing in which the sole topic is the
determination of the appropriateness of
expungement.
E. Notifications to Customers and States
Regarding Expungement Requests
1. Associated Person Serves Customer
With Statement of Claim
The Guidance suggests that when a
straight-in request is filed against a firm,
arbitrators order the associated person
to provide a copy of the statement of
claim to the customers involved in the
customer arbitration that gave rise to the
customer dispute information. This
helps ensure that the customers know
about the expungement request and
have an opportunity to participate in the
expungement hearing or provide a
position in writing on the associated
person’s request. The proposed rule
change would codify this practice in the
Industry Code by requiring that the
associated person provide all customers
whose customer arbitrations, civil
litigations and customer complaints
gave rise to the customer dispute
information that is a subject of the
expungement request with notice of the
expungement request by serving a copy
of the statement of claim requesting
expungement.134 The panel would be
authorized to decide whether
extraordinary circumstances exist that
make service on the customers
impracticable.135
Given the associated person’s
personal interest in obtaining
expungement, FINRA believes that the
panel should review all documents that
the associated person used to inform the
customers about the expungement
request as well as any customer
responses received. Accordingly, the
proposed amendments would require
the associated person to file with the
panel all documents provided by the
associated person to the customers,
including proof of service, and any
responses received by the associated
person from a customer.136 The
proposed requirement would help
ensure that the associated person does
not attempt to dissuade a customer from
participating in the expungement
hearing.
134 See proposed Rule 13805(b)(1)(A). The
associated person would be required to notify the
customer before the first scheduled hearing session
is held so that the customer would be aware of the
expungement request in advance and could plan to
participate once he or she is notified of the time and
place of the hearing. See FINRA Rule 13100(p)
(providing that a hearing session could be a hearing
or prehearing conference).
135 See proposed Rule 13805(b)(1)(A).
136 See proposed Rule 13805(b)(1)(C).
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2. Notification to Customers of
Expungement Hearing
To help ensure that the customer is
notified about the expungement hearing,
the proposed rule change would provide
that the Director shall notify all
customers whose customer arbitrations,
civil litigations and customer
complaints gave rise to the customer
dispute information that is a subject of
the expungement request, of the time,
date and place of the expungement
hearing using the customer’s current
address provided by the party seeking
expungement.137 The associated person
would be required to provide a current
address for the customer, or the
expungement request would be
considered deficient and would not be
served.
3. State Notification of Expungement
Requests
The proposed rule change would
require FINRA to notify state securities
regulators, in the manner determined by
FINRA, of an expungement request
within 30 days after receiving a
complete request for expungement.138
The proposed amendments would help
ensure that state securities regulators are
timely notified of the expungement
requests.139
F. Expungement Requests During
Simplified Customer Arbitrations
Customer arbitrations involving
$50,000 or less, called simplified
arbitrations, are governed by FINRA
Rule 12800. FINRA Rule 12800 provides
customers with expedited procedures to
make the FINRA forum economically
feasible for these smaller claims.
Simplified arbitrations are decided on
the pleadings and other materials
submitted by the parties, unless the
customer requests a hearing.140 Further,
a single arbitrator from the chairperson
roster is appointed to consider and
decide simplified arbitrations, unless
the parties agree in writing otherwise.141
137 See proposed Rule 13805(b)(2). This
requirement would apply to straight-in requests
filed under the Industry Code; notice to customers
would not be necessary for requests filed under
proposed Rule 12805 of the Customer Code as the
customer would be a named party.
138 See proposed Rules 12805(b) and 13805(b)(3).
139 FINRA would make this notification in
connection with expungement requests under the
Customer and Industry Codes. Such notification
could be achieved by notifying NASAA of the
expungement requests.
140 See FINRA Rule 12800(a).
141 See FINRA Rule 12800(b). The parties could
agree to have a three-person panel decide the
simplified case. For ease of reference, when
discussing expungement requests in simplified
arbitrations under the proposed rule change, the
rule filing uses the term ‘‘arbitrator,’’ unless
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The customer who files a simplified
arbitration determines how the claim
will be decided. In particular, the
customer has the option of having the
case decided in one of three ways: (1)
Without a hearing (referred to as ‘‘on the
papers’’), where the arbitrator decides
the case on the pleadings or other
materials; (2) in an ‘‘Option One’’ full
hearing, in which prehearings and
hearings on the merits take place
pursuant to the regular provisions of the
Code; or (3) in an ‘‘Option Two’’ special
proceeding, whereby the parties present
their case in a hearing to the arbitrator
in a compressed timeframe, so that the
hearings last no longer than one day.142
Currently, named associated persons
and parties requesting expungement onbehalf-of unnamed persons request
expungement during simplified
arbitrations. FINRA Rule 12800 does
not, however, expressly address how an
expungement request should be filed or
considered during a simplified
arbitration. The proposed amendments
would codify an associated person’s
ability to request expungement when
named as a respondent in a simplified
arbitration, and for other parties to
request expungement on-behalf-of an
unnamed person. The proposed rule
change would also establish procedures
for requesting and considering
expungement requests in simplified
arbitrations that are consistent with the
expedited nature of these
proceedings.143
1. Requesting Expungement
The proposed rule change would
permit a named associated person to
request expungement, or a party to file
an on-behalf-of request, during a
simplified arbitration. Unlike in a nonsimplified arbitration, if expungement is
not requested during the simplified
arbitration, the associated person would
be permitted to request it as a straightin request filed under the Industry
Code.144
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a. By a Named Associated Person
During the Simplified Arbitration
Under the proposed rule change, an
associated person named as a
respondent in a simplified arbitration
otherwise specified, to mean either a panel or single
arbitrator.
142 See FINRA Rule 12800(c).
143 Under the proposed rule change, an associated
person would not be permitted to request
expungement in a simplified arbitration
administered under the Industry Code, FINRA Rule
13800. All expungement requests under the
Industry Code must be filed in accordance with
proposed Rule 13805.
144 See infra Item II.A.1.(II)F.1.c., ‘‘When No
Expungement Request is Made in a Simplified
Arbitration.’’
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could request expungement during the
arbitration of the customer dispute
information arising from the customer’s
statement of claim, provided the request
is eligible for arbitration.145
If a named associated person requests
expungement during a simplified
arbitration, the proposed rule change
would require the request to be filed in
an answer or pleading requesting
expungement and include the same
information required as a request filed
in a non-simplified arbitration.146
Because of the expedited nature of
simplified arbitrations, if the named
associated person requests expungement
in a pleading other than answer, the
request must be filed within 30 days
after the date that FINRA notifies the
associated person of arbitrator
appointment,147 which is the last
deadline provided to the parties in a
simplified arbitration to submit any
additional documents before the case is
submitted to the arbitrator.148
To limit arbitrator shopping, the
arbitrator would be required to decide
an expungement request once it is filed
by the associated person.149 If an
associated person withdraws or does not
pursue the request after filing, the
arbitrator would be required to deny the
request with prejudice so that it could
not be re-filed.150
b. By a Party On-Behalf-Of an Unnamed
Person
Under the proposed amendments, the
requirements for a party to file an onbehalf-of request during a simplified
arbitration would be the same as the
requirements for a named associated
person filing an expungement request
during a simplified arbitration, with one
145 See proposed Rule 12800(d)(1)(A). The
limitations that apply to expungement requests
filed by a named associated person under proposed
Rule 12805(a)(1)(B) would apply to these requests.
See supra Item II.A.1.(II)C., ‘‘Limitations on
Expungement Requests.’’
146 See proposed Rules 12800(d)(1)(B)(i) and
12805(a)(1)(C)(ii). Thus, the associated person’s
expungement request would be required to contain
the applicable filing fee; the CRD number of the
party requesting expungement; each CRD
occurrence number that is the subject of the request;
the case name and docket number that gave rise to
the disclosure, if applicable; and an explanation of
whether expungement of the same customer dispute
information was previously requested and, if so,
how it was decided.
147 FINRA would notify state securities regulators,
in the manner determined by FINRA, of an
expungement request within 30 days after receiving
a complete expungement request. See proposed
Rule 12800(f)(1).
148 FINRA notifies the parties when an arbitrator
has been appointed. FINRA informs the parties that
they have 30 days from the date of notification to
submit additional documents or other information
before the case is submitted to the arbitrator.
149 See proposed Rule 12800(e)(1).
150 See proposed Rule 12800(d)(1)(C).
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distinction. A named party would only
be able to file an on-behalf-of request
during a simplified arbitration with the
consent of the unnamed person. As with
on-behalf-of requests filed in customer
arbitrations under proposed Rule
12805(a)(2), the unnamed person who
would benefit from the expungement
request must consent to such filing by
signing the Form.151
c. When No Expungement Request Is
Made in a Simplified Arbitration
If expungement is not requested
during the simplified arbitration under
proposed Rule 12800(d), the associated
person would be able to file a straightin request under proposed Rule 13805
and have the request decided by a threeperson panel randomly selected from
the Special Arbitrator Roster.152 The
request would be subject to the
limitations on whether and when such
requests may be filed under the Industry
Code.153
Due to the expedited nature of
simplified proceedings, FINRA believes
that the associated person should be
able to seek expungement separately
under the Industry Code and have his or
her expungement request decided by a
panel randomly selected from the
Special Arbitrator Roster. In simplified
arbitrations, there may be less
discovery, and the customer may dictate
the extent of the evidence presented to
the arbitrator. The customer may, for
example, determine to have the
arbitration decided on the papers.
Because there may be less information
available for the arbitrator to evaluate an
expungement request during a
simplified arbitration—even when the
simplified arbitration results in an
award—the associated person would
retain the ability to choose to file the
request as a straight-in request under the
Industry Code.
2. Deciding Expungement Requests
During Simplified Arbitrations
If a named associated person or party
on-behalf-of an unnamed person
requests expungement during a
simplified arbitration, the arbitrator
would be required to decide the
expungement request, regardless of how
151 See proposed Rule 12800(d)(2). The request
must also meet the same requirements as an onbehalf-of request filed under proposed Rule
12805(a)(2). See proposed Rules 12805(a)(1)(C)(ii),
12805(a)(2)(C)(ii) and 12805(a)(2)(D); see also supra
Items II.A.1.(II)A.1.b., ‘‘Expungement Requests By a
Party Named in the Customer Arbitration OnBehalf-Of an Unnamed Person.’’
152 See proposed Rules 12800(e)(2), 13805 and
13806.
153 See proposed Rule 13805(a)(2); see also supra
Item II.A.1.(II)C., ‘‘Limitations on Expungement
Requests.’’
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the simplified arbitration case closes
(e.g., even if the case settles).154
Under the proposed rule change, how
and when the expungement request is
decided would depend on which option
the customer selects to decide the
simplified arbitration.
a. No Hearing or Option Two Special
Proceeding
If the customer opts not to have a
hearing or chooses an Option Two
special proceeding, the arbitrator would
decide the customer’s dispute first and
issue an award.155 After the customer’s
dispute is decided, the arbitrator must
hold a separate expungement-only
hearing to consider and decide the
expungement request and issue a
separate award.156
The arbitrator would decide the
customer’s dispute first and issue an
award to minimize any delays in
resolving the customer arbitration and
any delays in potential recovery that a
customer may be awarded. Further,
because the customer arbitration may
not be as fully developed when an ‘‘on
the papers’’ or special proceeding is
requested, the arbitrator must hold a
separate expungement-only hearing to
ensure that he or she has access to
sufficient evidence to make a fullyinformed decision on the expungement
request. The Director would notify all
customers whose simplified customer
arbitrations and customer complaints
gave rise to the customer dispute
information that is a subject of the
expungement request, of the time, date
and place of the expungement
hearing.157
b. Option One Hearing
If the customer chooses to have a full
‘‘Option One’’ hearing on his or her
claim and it closes by award, the
arbitrator would be required to consider
and decide the expungement request
during the customer arbitration and
include the decision in the award.158
This process would be the same as
deciding an expungement request
during a non-simplified customer
arbitration that closes by award after a
hearing, where the customer’s claim and
154 See
proposed Rule 12800(e)(1).
proposed FINRA Rule 12800(e)(1)(A).
156 See supra note 155. The arbitrator must
conduct the expungement hearing pursuant to
proposed Rule 12805(c). The expungement award
must meet the requirements of proposed Rule
12805(c)(8), and forum fees would be assessed
pursuant to proposed Rule 12805(c)(9).
157 See proposed Rule 12800(f)(2). The Director
would also notify these customers of the
expungement hearing, if the associated person opts
to file the request under the Industry Code after the
simplified case closes.
158 See proposed Rule 12800(e)(1)(B)(i).
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155 See
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expungement request are addressed
during the customer arbitration. As
there would be a more complete factual
record from the full hearing on the
merits of the customer case, the
arbitrator could decide the customer
dispute and the expungement request
after the hearing concludes.
If the customer arbitration closes
other than by award or by award
without a hearing, the arbitrator would
be required to hold a separate
expungement-only hearing to consider
and decide the expungement request
and issue the decision in an award.159
The arbitrator would need to conduct a
separate expungement hearing to
develop a complete factual record in
order to make a fully-informed decision
on the expungement request.160
Given the generally less complex
nature of simplified arbitrations, FINRA
does not believe that it is necessary for
a panel from the Special Arbitrator
Roster to decide an expungement
request if a simplified customer
arbitration closes other than by award or
by award without a hearing. However, if
the Commission approves the proposed
rule change, FINRA will continue to
monitor expungement requests and
decisions in simplified arbitrations to
determine if such requests should be
decided by the Special Arbitrator
Roster, particularly if the customer
chooses to have his or her case decided
on the papers or in a special proceeding.
G. Non-Substantive Changes
FINRA is also proposing to amend the
Codes to make non-substantive,
technical changes to the rules impacted
by the proposed rule change. For
example, the proposed rule change
would require the renumbering of
paragraphs and the updating of crossreferences in the rules impacted by the
proposed rule change. In addition, the
title of Part VIII of the Customer Code
would be amended to add a reference to
‘‘Expungement’’ proceedings. Similarly,
the title of Part VIII of the Industry Code
would be amended to add a reference to
‘‘Expungement Proceedings’’ and
‘‘Promissory Note Proceedings.’’ FINRA
believes the proposed changes to the
titles would more accurately reflect the
contents of Part VIII of the Customer
and Industry Codes. FINRA is also
proposing to re-number current FINRA
Rule 13806 (Promissory Note
Proceedings) as new FINRA Rule 13807,
without substantive change to the
current rule language.
If the Commission approves the
proposed rule change, FINRA will
159 See
160 See
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supra note 156.
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announce the effective date of the
proposed rule change in a Regulatory
Notice to be published no later than 60
days following Commission approval.
The effective date will be no later than
120 days following publication of the
Regulatory Notice announcing
Commission approval of the proposed
rule change.
2. Statutory Basis
FINRA believes that the proposed rule
change is consistent with the provisions
of Section 15A(b)(6) of the Act,161
which requires, among other things, that
FINRA rules must be designed to
prevent fraudulent and manipulative
acts and practices, to promote just and
equitable principles of trade, and, in
general, to protect investors and the
public interest.
The proposed rule change seeks to
balance the important investor
protection objectives of maintaining the
integrity and accuracy of the
information in the CRD system and
BrokerCheck with the interest of brokers
and firms in the fairness and accuracy
of the disclosures contained in the
systems.
The proposed rule change will
enhance the current expungement
framework and improve the efficiency
of the FINRA arbitration forum by
codifying the Guidance as rules that
arbitrators and parties must follow. In
addition, when an associated person
files a claim against a firm for the sole
purpose of requesting expungement,
these cases can be complex to resolve,
particularly if the customer or
customer’s representative does not
participate in the hearing. Having three
arbitrators available to ask questions,
request evidence and generally to serve
as fact-finders in the absence of
customer input will help ensure that a
complete factual record is created to
support the arbitrators’ decision in such
expungement hearings. In addition, the
proposed rule change will help ensure
that arbitrators who will decide these
requests meet heightened qualifications
and have completed enhanced
expungement training. FINRA believes
that by requiring a three-person panel
from the Special Arbitrator Roster to
decide expungement requests filed
under the Industry Code, the proposed
rule change will help ensure
expungement is recommended in
limited circumstances.
The proposed rule change will
foreclose a practice that has emerged in
the existing expungement process where
parties seek expungement after a prior
denial by a court or panel of a request
161 15
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to expunge the same customer dispute
information, or where parties withdraw
or do not pursue an expungement
request and then make another request
for expungement of the same customer
dispute information. The proposed rule
change imposes procedures and
requirements around when and how a
party may request expungement, and
expressly provides that omission of
certain of the requirements will make
the expungement request deficient.
Further, the proposed rule change
provides the Director with express
authority to deny the forum if an
expungement request is ineligible for
arbitration under the proposed rules.
Thus, FINRA believes the proposed rule
change will add more transparency to
the expungement process.
Moreover, the proposed rule change
seeks to protect investors and the public
interest by notifying customers of
expungement requests filed under the
Industry Code. Although a straight-in
request will be filed against a firm,
customers whose disputes are a subject
of the request will be notified and
encouraged to participate in the
expungement hearing. Such
notifications will make clear to
arbitrators and parties the rights of
customers who choose to participate in
these hearings. The customers’ input
will provide the panel with additional
insight on the customer dispute and
help create a complete factual record,
which will result in more informed
decisions on expungement requests.
FINRA believes this enhancement,
which will encourage and facilitate
customer participation in expungement
hearings, will help to maintain the
integrity of the information in the CRD
system.
Further, the process of requesting
expungement during a simplified
arbitration will be codified to help
ensure that customers are aware of their
rights under the process and how an
expungement request will affect (and
not affect) their arbitration claims. By
expressly incorporating the practice of
requesting expungement during
simplified proceedings, the proposed
amendments add consistency to the
rules and provide more guidance to the
arbitrators and the parties requesting
expungement.
The proposed rule change will also
help ensure that state securities
regulators have knowledge of
expungement requests by requiring
notification to the states, in the manner
determined by FINRA, after FINRA
receives a complete expungement
request.
For these reasons, the proposed rule
change represents a significant step
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towards addressing concerns with the
current expungement framework.
FINRA believes the proposed rule
change will improve the expungement
framework by incorporating the
Guidance, establishing a Special
Arbitrator Roster and addressing gaps
that have emerged in the existing
expungement framework. In addition,
FINRA believes these changes will help
to maintain the accuracy and integrity of
the information in the CRD system and
BrokerCheck, while also protecting
brokers from the publication of false
allegations against them.
B. Self-Regulatory Organization’s
Statement on Burden on Competition
FINRA does not believe that the
proposed rule change will result in any
burden on competition that is not
necessary or appropriate in furtherance
of the purposes of the Act.
Economic Impact Assessment
FINRA has undertaken an economic
impact assessment to analyze the
regulatory need for the proposed rule
change, its potential economic impacts,
including anticipated costs, benefits and
distributional and competitive effects,
relative to the current baseline, and the
alternatives FINRA considered in
assessing how best to meet FINRA’s
regulatory objectives.
1. Regulatory Need
The proposed rule change would
address concerns relating to the
expungement process that are not
consistent with the regulatory intent to
permit expungement in limited
circumstances. The concerns include
the potential impact of the absence of
customers and their representatives
from an expungement hearing which
may result in the arbitrator or panel
receiving information only from the
associated person. The concerns also
include associated persons having their
straight-in requests heard by a single
arbitrator instead of a three-person
panel, and the selection of arbitrators to
hear these requests. Lastly, the concerns
include requests to expunge the same
customer dispute information in
multiple proceedings. The proposed
rule change would also codify and
expand upon the provisions of the
Guidance to help ensure that arbitrators
and parties are adhering to these
procedures for all expungement
requests, and to encourage and facilitate
customer participation in expungement
hearings.
2. Economic Baseline
The economic baseline for the
proposed rule change includes the
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62157
current provisions under the Codes that
address the process for parties to seek
expungement relief. In addition,
because arbitrators are generally
believed to be adhering to the best
practices and recommendations that are
a part of the Guidance, the economic
baseline also includes the Guidance.162
The proposed rule change is expected to
affect associated persons and other
parties to expungement requests
including member firms, customers and
arbitrators. The proposed rule change
may also affect users of customer
dispute information contained in the
CRD system and displayed through
BrokerCheck.163
The customer dispute information
contained in the CRD system is
submitted by registered securities firms
and regulatory authorities in response to
questions on the uniform registration
forms.164 The information can be
valuable to current and prospective
customers to learn about the conduct of
associated persons.165 Current and
prospective customers may not select or
remain with an associated person or a
member firm that employs an associated
person with a record of customer
disputes. Similarly, member firms and
other companies in the financial
services industry may use the
information when making employment
decisions.166 In this manner, the
customer dispute information contained
in the CRD system (and displayed
through BrokerCheck) may positively or
negatively affect the business and
professional opportunities of associated
persons. Where the information is
reliable, it also provides for customer
162 See
supra note 3.
of customer dispute information include
investors; member firms and other companies in the
financial services industry; individuals registered as
brokers or seeking employment in the brokerage
industry; and FINRA, states and other regulators.
164 See supra note 5 and accompanying text for
additional discussion of the uniform registration
forms and the information contained in the CRD
system. Some of the information may involve
pending actions or allegations that have not been
resolved or proven.
165 Recent academic studies provide evidence that
the past disciplinary and other regulatory events
associated with a firm or individual can be
predictive of similar future events. See Hammad
Qureshi & Jonathan Sokobin, Do Investors Have
Valuable Information About Brokers? FINRA Office
of the Chief Economist Working Paper, Aug. 2015;
see also Mark Egan, Gregor Matvos, & Amit Seru,
The Market for Financial Adviser Misconduct,
Journal of Political Economy 127, no. 1 (February
2019): 233–295.
166 Customer dispute information submitted to
the CRD system and displayed through
BrokerCheck may have other uses. For example,
investors may use the information when deciding
with whom to do business. FINRA, states and other
regulators also use the information to regulate
brokers.
163 Users
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protections and information useful for
member firms.
Any negative impact on the business
and professional opportunities of
associated persons may be appropriate
and consistent with investor protection,
such as when the customer dispute
information has merit. Any such
negative impact may be inappropriate,
however, if, for example, the customer
dispute information is factually
impossible, clearly erroneous, or false.
Regardless of the merit, associated
persons have an incentive to remove
customer dispute information from the
CRD system and its public display
through BrokerCheck.
An associated person, or a party onbehalf-of an unnamed person, typically
begins the process to remove customer
dispute information from the CRD
system by filing an expungement
request in FINRA arbitration. FINRA is
able to identify 6,928 requests to
expunge customer dispute information
in FINRA arbitration from January 2016
through December 2019 (the ‘‘sample
period’’). More than one expungement
request can be made in a single
arbitration, and multiple expungement
requests may relate to the same
arbitration, civil litigation or complaint
if the dispute relates to more than one
associated person.
Among the 6,928 expungement
requests, 3,203 requests (46 percent)
were made during a customer
arbitration, and 3,725 requests (54
percent) were filed as a straight-in
request.167 The 3,203 expungement
requests made during a customer
arbitration include 2,936 requests made
during a non-simplified customer
arbitration and 267 requests made
during a simplified customer
arbitration. The 3,725 requests to
expunge customer dispute information
disclosures filed as a straight-in request
include 3,657 requests in arbitrations
filed solely against a member firm or
against a member firm and a customer,
and 68 requests in arbitrations filed
solely against a customer. In the 3,203
expungement requests made during a
customer arbitration, the associated
person was a named party in 1,504 of
the requests (47 percent), and an
unnamed party in 1,699 of the requests
(53 percent).
Among the expungement requests
during the sample period, FINRA is able
to identify 82 requests to expunge the
same customer dispute information in a
167 Sixteen requests to expunge customer dispute
information were made during industry arbitrations
that were not straight-in requests. To simplify the
analysis, we exclude these 16 requests from the
sample.
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subsequent arbitration.168 For purposes
of this analysis, FINRA limited the
identification of additional
expungement requests to those requests
where both the initial request and the
subsequent request were made during
the sample period. Additional
subsequent expungement requests may
have been filed during the sample
period if the initial expungement
request was made prior to the sample
period (i.e., before January 2016). The
82 requests to expunge the same
customer dispute information in a
subsequent arbitration can, therefore, be
considered a lower bound for the
number of these requests during the
sample period. The proposed rule
change would foreclose associated
persons from filing additional requests.
As of December 2019, 5,159 of the
6,928 expungement requests were made
in an arbitration that closed. Among the
5,159 expungement requests, 2,255
requests (44 percent) were made during
a customer arbitration and 2,904
requests (56 percent) were filed as a
straight-in request. The 2,255
expungement requests made during a
customer arbitration include 2,015
requests made during a non-simplified
customer arbitration and 240 requests
made during a simplified customer
arbitration. The 2,904 requests filed as
a straight-in request include 2,838
requests in arbitrations filed solely
against a member firm or a member firm
and a customer, and 66 requests in
arbitrations filed solely against a
customer. Under the proposed rule
change, an associated person would be
prohibited from filing a straight-in
request against a customer.
An arbitrator or panel made a
decision in arbitrations relating to 3,722
of the 5,159 requests in arbitrations that
closed, and made no decision in
arbitrations relating to the remaining
1,437 requests. A single arbitrator made
168 Eighty of the 82 subsequent expungement
requests relate to previous requests in another
arbitration that were withdrawn or otherwise not
pursued by the associated person or party that filed
the request. For the two remaining subsequent
expungement requests, one relates to a previous
request on behalf of an unnamed person that was
denied, and the other to a previous request that was
determined by the panel to be ineligible for
arbitration. An arbitrator or panel recommended
expungement in 60 of the 82 subsequent
expungement requests and denied eight. One of the
granted requests relates to the previous request that
was denied. Another of the granted requests relates
to the previous request that was deficient and
therefore not decided. Seven subsequent
expungement requests were withdrawn or deficient
and, therefore, not decided. In addition, seven
subsequent expungement requests were still
pending as of the end of the sample period. In 42
of the 82 subsequent expungement requests, the
associated person was an unnamed party in the first
arbitration.
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a decision in arbitrations relating to
2,692 of the 3,722 requests, and a twoor three-person panel made a decision
in arbitrations relating to the remaining
1,030 requests. For the customer
arbitrations, the decision by an
arbitrator or panel may relate to the
arbitration, an expungement request, or
both. For the straight-in requests, the
decision would relate to the
expungement request only. In
arbitrations where no decision on the
merits of the customer case or an
expungement request was made, the
requests were either not eligible (as
determined by the arbitrator or panel),
withdrawn, or otherwise not pursued by
the associated person or party that filed
the request.
As detailed in the next paragraph, the
percentage of expungement requests
that are recommended is higher when
the arbitrator or panel receives
information only from the associated
person or other party requesting
expungement. The arbitrator or panel is
likely to receive information only from
the party requesting expungement when
(1) the customer arbitration does not
close by award after a hearing (e.g.,
settles), or (2) an associated person files
a straight-in request against a member
firm. In both circumstances, the
customer and his or her representative
have little incentive to participate in an
expungement hearing.
Among the 3,722 expungement
requests in arbitrations where an
arbitrator or panel made a decision,
2,874 resulted in an arbitrator or panel
recommending expungement (77
percent). Among the 3,722 expungement
requests, 976 requests were made during
a non-simplified or simplified customer
arbitration, and 2,746 requests were
filed as a straight-in request. An
arbitrator or panel recommended
expungement in response to 595 of the
976 requests (61 percent) made during
a customer arbitration. This includes
168 of the 369 requests (46 percent)
made during a customer arbitration that
closed by award after a hearing, and 427
of the 607 expungement requests (70
percent) made during a customer
arbitration that closed by award without
a hearing or other than by award. An
arbitrator or panel recommended
expungement in 2,279 of the 2,746
requests filed as a straight-in request (83
percent).169
169 Among the 976 expungement requests during
a non-simplified or simplified customer arbitration,
a single arbitrator made a decision in arbitrations
relating to 306 requests, and a two- or three-person
panel made a decision in arbitrations relating to 670
requests. In addition, among the 2,746 straight-in
requests, a single arbitrator made a decision in
arbitrations relating to 2,386 requests and a two- or
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A recommendation for expungement
in FINRA arbitration is not the final step
in the expungement process. If the
arbitrator or panel recommends
expungement, then the firm or
associated person must confirm the
arbitration award in a court of
competent jurisdiction and serve the
confirmed award on FINRA.170 As of
July 2020, FINRA had removed 2,641
customer dispute information
disclosures from the CRD system from
the possible 2,874 requests (92 percent)
in which an arbitrator or panel
recommended expungement. Firms or
associated persons may have not yet
sought or obtained a court order for the
remaining disputes.
Approximately one-third of the 2,641
customer dispute information
disclosures (965, or 37 percent) that
were expunged were submitted to the
CRD system from 2014 to 2019. The 965
customer dispute information
disclosures reflect three percent of the
total number of customer dispute
information disclosures submitted to the
CRD system during this period of time
(approximately 37,000). The remaining
1,676 customer dispute information
disclosures were submitted to the CRD
system prior to 2014. The number of
customer dispute information
disclosures expunged during the sample
period that were submitted to the CRD
system prior to 2014 suggests that
associated persons may yet still expunge
customer dispute information
disclosures submitted to the CRD
system during or prior to the sample
period. The three percent of expunged
customer dispute information
disclosures should therefore be
considered a lower bound for the rate at
which customer dispute information
disclosures are expunged.
A firm or associated person can also
initiate a proceeding directly in a court
of competent jurisdiction without first
going through any arbitration
proceeding. From January 2016 through
December 2019, the expungement of 138
customer dispute information
disclosures were sought directly in
court. As of July 2020, court
proceedings had concluded for 118 of
those disclosures and proceedings
remained ongoing for 20 disclosures.
Among the 118 disclosures for which
the court proceeding had concluded, 86
disclosures were ordered expunged by a
court and 32 disclosures were not
ordered to be expunged. FINRA will
three-person panel made a decision in arbitrations
relating to 360 requests. See infra note 190 for a
discussion of the percentage of expungement
requests recommended between two- or threeperson panels and one-person panels.
170 See supra note 10.
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challenge these requests in court in
appropriate circumstances.
3. Economic Impact
A. Overview
The proposed rule change would
codify the best practices described in
the Guidance.171 The best practices
include the prohibition on the filing of
an expungement request if (1) an
arbitration panel or court of competent
jurisdiction previously denied a request
to expunge the same customer dispute
information, or (2) the customer dispute
information arises from a customer’s
arbitration that has not concluded.
Based on FINRA staff observations,
arbitrators are generally believed to be
adhering to these best practices and,
therefore, codifying them should not
result in new material economic
impacts. Codifying the best practices in
the Guidance should, however, clarify
among parties how the practices should
be applied, including what is permitted
during the expungement hearing and
the responsibilities of the parties and
the arbitrator or panel when
expungement is requested. Codifying
the Guidance may also help inform
customers more generally of the
practices that the forum has
implemented to encourage and facilitate
customer participation in expungement
hearings. In addition, parties may incur
fewer costs from the codification of the
practices, including the costs from
actions or decisions (e.g., requesting
expungement of customer dispute
information that was previously denied
in another arbitration or court) that
would be denied by an arbitration panel
pursuant to the Guidance.
The proposed rule change would also
introduce other changes to the Codes
that expand upon or that are not a part
of the Guidance. In particular, the
proposed rule change would restrict
when an associated person is permitted
to request expungement in FINRA
arbitration. The proposed rule change
would also require an arbitrator or panel
from a customer arbitration that closes
by award after a hearing, from a
simplified customer arbitration, or a
panel from the Special Arbitrator Roster
to decide an expungement request.
Finally, the proposed rule change would
address the participation by associated
persons and customers in expungement
hearings. These changes may result in
new material economic benefits and
costs. These economic effects are
discussed in further detail below.
171 See
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B. Expungement Requests During
Customer Arbitrations
The proposed rule change would set
forth requirements for expungement
requests during customer arbitrations.
The proposed rule change would
establish different requirements for nonsimplified customer arbitrations and
simplified customer arbitrations, and for
an associated person named or
unnamed to a (non-simplified or
simplified) customer arbitration.
i. Expungement Requests by Named
Associated Persons During NonSimplified Customer Arbitrations
The proposed rule change would
require an associated person named in
a non-simplified customer arbitration to
request expungement during the
customer arbitration regarding the
conduct that gave rise to the arbitration.
Otherwise, the associated person would
forfeit the opportunity to seek
expungement of the same customer
dispute information in any subsequent
proceeding. The arbitrator or panel from
a non-simplified customer arbitration
would decide an expungement request
if the arbitration closes by award after
a hearing.172
The proposed rule change would help
ensure that, if possible, the arbitrator or
panel from a non-simplified customer
arbitration, with input from all parties
and access to all evidence, testimony
and other documents, would decide an
expungement request. These arbitrators
or panels would be best situated to
decide the related issue of
expungement, and thereby help ensure
that expungement recommendations
and the customer dispute information
contained in the CRD system and
displayed through BrokerCheck reflect
the conduct of associated persons.
An associated person named in a nonsimplified customer arbitration may lose
the ability to request expungement of
the customer dispute information
arising from the arbitration. A named
associated person who does not request
expungement during a non-simplified
customer arbitration (or within the
required time) would lose the ability to
seek expungement relief.173 Because the
named associated person may lose the
ability to assess information that arises
as a part of arbitration before they are
required to request expungement,
172 See supra Item II.A.1.(II)A.1.a., ‘‘Expungement
Requests During the Customer Arbitration, By a
Respondent Named in a Customer Arbitration.’’
173 Under the proposed rule change, a party that
does not file or serve an expungement request at
least 30 days before the first scheduled hearing
begins could file a motion seeking an extension.
The motion, however, may be opposed by another
party and denied.
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associated persons may incur costs to
preserve their right to request
expungement by filing a request with or
without the expectation that the
arbitrator or panel would recommend
expungement. FINRA believes,
however, that the proposed rule change
would mitigate these potential costs by
providing associated persons a
reasonable amount of time (i.e., within
45 days of receipt of the customer’s
statement of claim if the request is
included in an answer, or 30 days before
the first scheduled hearing begins if the
request is included in a pleading)
during the arbitration to consider
whether to file a request. Parties may
also incur other, indirect costs if, for
example, the deadline to request
expungement during a non-simplified
customer arbitration causes them to
incur costs to expedite the filing of the
expungement request or constrains their
ability to engage in other activities (i.e.,
incur opportunity costs).
ii. Expungement Requests During a NonSimplified Customer Arbitration That
Close Other Than by Award or by
Award Without a Hearing
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Associated persons who request
expungement during a non-simplified
customer arbitration (either as a named
party or as an unnamed party that
consents to an on-behalf-of request) that
closes other than by award or by award
without a hearing (and would have
otherwise had their expungement
request decided as part of the customer
arbitration) would incur additional costs
to file a straight-in request.174
Associated persons may incur delays in
receiving a decision on the request, and
may incur additional legal fees and
forum fees to resolve the straight-in
request. The member firms with which
the associated persons were associated
at the time the customer dispute arose
would also incur additional legal and
forum fees. These costs would be
imposed by the proposed rule change if
the expungement requests would have
otherwise been decided as part of the
non-simplified customer arbitration.
These costs would not be imposed by
the proposed rule change, however, if
regardless of the proposed rule change
associated persons would have filed a
174 Associated persons who would otherwise
request expungement as a counterclaim during an
industry arbitration, which is rare, or who would
otherwise intervene in a customer arbitration and
have an expungement request decided during the
arbitration, would instead be required to file a
straight-in request under proposed Rule 13805.
These associated persons and member firms with
which the associated persons were associated
would incur similar costs.
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straight-in request after the close of the
non-simplified customer arbitration.
The additional costs for an associated
person to resolve a straight-in request
after the close of a non-simplified
customer arbitration (that closes other
than by award or by award without a
hearing) may reduce the likelihood that
the parties settle a customer
arbitration.175 In particular, the
associated person may factor the cost to
resolve a separate straight-in request
into the decision regarding whether to
settle the arbitration or have the case
decided by the arbitrator or panel to the
arbitration. In addition, even if the
parties continue to settle the dispute,
the associated person may subtract the
cost to resolve a separate straight-in
request from the potential settlement
amount.
An associated person (or a party on
behalf of an associated person) who files
a straight-in request would incur the
minimum hearing session fee of $1,125
for each session the panel conducts to
decide the expungement request.176 The
member firm at which the broker was
associated at the time the customer
dispute arose would also be assessed a
minimum surcharge fee of $1,900 and a
minimum process fee of $3,750. The
fees associated with non-monetary
claims would help ensure that costs to
the forum for administering
expungement requests are allocated as
intended to the party or parties
requesting expungement and, as
applicable, the member firms at which
the broker was associated at the time the
customer dispute arose.
iii. Expungement Requests by Unnamed
Persons in Non-Simplified Customer
Arbitrations and by Named and
Unnamed Persons in Simplified
Customer Arbitrations
The proposed rule change would not
require an unnamed person in a nonsimplified customer arbitration, an
associated person named in a simplified
customer arbitration, or an unnamed
person in a simplified customer
arbitration to request expungement of
the customer dispute information
during the customer arbitration. Instead,
175 FINRA notes, however, that the determination
regarding whether to settle a customer arbitration
can depend on a number of factors, including the
parties’ respective estimates of the additional costs
they would incur to continue the customer
arbitration, the value that the associated person
places on expungement, the associated person’s
estimate of the likelihood that he or she could
obtain expungement in the customer case compared
to in a straight-in request and the cost that they
estimate the associated person would incur to
pursue the straight-in request.
176 The associated person would not, however,
incur an additional filing fee to file the straight-in
expungement request. See infra Item II.C.8.
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similar to today, these associated
persons may wait until after the
customer arbitration has concluded to
request expungement as a straight-in
request.177
The option to wait until after the
customer arbitration has concluded to
request expungement is not a benefit
created by the proposed rule change, but
is instead currently permitted under the
Codes. FINRA believes that an
associated person who is not named in
a non-simplified customer arbitration,
or an associated person who is either
named or not named in a simplified
customer arbitration, should be able to
seek expungement as a straight-in
request and have their request decided
by a panel from the Special Arbitrator
Roster.
Associated persons who are not
required and choose not to request
expungement during the customer
arbitration may also incur additional
costs. Any incremental costs from not
filing an expungement request during a
customer arbitration, however, are not
imposed by the proposed rule change.
Instead, they are borne at the discretion
of the parties who make the
determination of when to request
expungement, and are similar to the
costs they would incur under the Codes
today.
iv. Time Limit for Requesting
Expungement in Simplified and NonSimplified Customer Arbitrations
A named associated person or a party
on-behalf-of an unnamed person would
be required to request expungement in
a simplified customer arbitration within
30 days of the date that FINRA provides
notice of arbitrator appointment.178 A
named associated person or a party
requesting expungement on-behalf-of an
unnamed person in a non-simplified
customer arbitration would be required
to request expungement no later than 30
days before the first scheduled
hearing.179
177 This requirement would help ensure that the
panel from the Special Arbitrator Roster is aware of
the outcome of the arbitration when deciding the
request.
178 The proposed rule change would require that
if the named associated person or party on-behalfof an unnamed person requests expungement in a
pleading other than an answer, the request must be
filed within 30 days after the date FINRA provides
the associated person with notice of arbitrator
appointment, which is the last deadline provided
to the parties in a simplified arbitration to submit
additional documents before the case is submitted
to the arbitrator. See proposed Rules
12800(d)(1)(B)(i) and 12800(d)(2)(B)(i).
179 See proposed Rules 12805(a)(1)(C)(i) and
12805(a)(2)(C)(iii). The proposed rule change also
provides that FINRA would notify state securities
regulators, in the manner determined by FINRA, of
an expungement request within 30 days of receiving
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Associated persons who do not
request expungement within these time
limits may incur additional costs that
may include costs arising from delays in
receiving a decision on the request and
legal and forum fees. The member firms
with which the brokers were associated
at the time the customer dispute arose
would also incur additional legal and
forum fees. These costs would be
imposed by the proposed rule change.
C. Time Limits for Filing Straight-In
Requests
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The proposed rule change would also
set forth requirements for an associated
person to file a straight-in request. For
customer dispute information reported
to the CRD system after the effective
date of the proposed rule change, the
proposed rule change would require an
associated person to file a straight-in
request within two years of a customer
arbitration or civil litigation closing, or,
if no customer arbitration or civil
litigation, within six years from the
initial reporting of the customer
complaint to the CRD system.180
The proposed rule change would also
require a two-year time limit for
requests to expunge customer dispute
information that arose from a customer
arbitration or civil litigation that closed
on or prior to the effective date of the
proposed rule change or a six-year time
limit to request expungement of
customer dispute information arising
from a customer complaint initially
reported to the CRD system on or prior
to the effective date of the proposed rule
change.181 These time limits would
begin from the effective date of the
proposed rule change.
Arbitrators on the Special Arbitrator
Roster would have the experience,
qualifications and training necessary to
decide straight-in requests. These time
limits may increase customer
participation in the proceedings and the
likelihood that the panel from the
Special Arbitrator Roster receives the
relevant evidence and testimony to
decide an expungement request. The
time limits would help ensure that the
expungement hearing is held close in
time to the customer arbitration or civil
litigation, or the events that led to the
customer dispute information
disclosure, and foreclose the option of
a complete request for expungement. See proposed
Rule 12805(b). State securities regulators would,
therefore, have additional time to review the
request and decide whether to oppose expungement
if confirmation of an expungement recommendation
is later sought in court.
180 See proposed Rules 13805(a)(2)(A)(iv) and
13805(a)(2)(A)(v).
181 See proposed Rules 13805(a)(2)(B)(i) and
13805(a)(2)(B)(ii).
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an associated person to choose the
timing of a straight-in request to
potentially reduce the likelihood of
customer participation. Similar to other
amendments proposed herein, an
increase in customer participation may
provide a panel from the Special
Arbitrator Roster with additional
information to decide an expungement
request and help ensure the accuracy of
the customer dispute information
contained in the CRD system and
displayed through BrokerCheck.
These time limits, however, may
constrain an associated person from
filing a straight-in request.182 Associated
persons who would otherwise delay the
filing of a straight-in request may incur
additional costs to file a straight-in
request within the required time limits
(e.g., opportunity costs, as described
above). These time limits may also
constrain an associated person from
filing more than one expungement
request in the same straight-in request.
For example, associated persons may
lose the ability to delay the filing of a
straight-in request to expunge a
complaint from a particular customer
until other customers make additional
complaints, if the filing of the straightin request to expunge the complaint of
the first customer would be time barred.
Instead, an associated person may be
required (as a result of the time limits)
to file more than one straight-in request.
Associated persons who are restricted
from including more than one request to
expunge customer dispute information
in the same straight-in request would
incur additional legal and forum fees for
each straight-in request or not seek
expungement for all of the disclosures.
The member firm at which the
associated person was associated at the
time the customer disputes arose would
incur additional legal and forum fees if
the associated person were to file
multiple, separate straight-in requests.
D. Time Limits for Straight-In
Requests—Quantitative Description
As discussed as part of the Economic
Baseline, 3,725 expungement requests
were filed as straight-in requests during
the sample period. The following
estimates demonstrate that the majority
of these straight-in requests would not
have been permitted under the proposed
time limits, and associated persons may
not have been able to include more than
182 If the Commission approves the proposed rule
change, FINRA expects that a number of associated
persons would file a straight-in request to expunge
customer dispute information reported to the CRD
system prior to or soon after the effective date of
the proposed rule change to help ensure that they
are not constrained from seeking expungement
because of the proposed time limitations.
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one expungement request in the same
straight-in request. The estimates,
however, do not take into account the
potential change in the behavior of
associated persons; associated persons
would have incentive under the
proposed amendments to file the
straight-in requests within the time
limits or otherwise lose the ability to
make or file a request.183
Among the 3,725 expungement
requests filed as a straight-in request,
1,140 requests followed a (nonsimplified or simplified) customer
arbitration (of the same underlying
dispute). Two-hundred ninety of the
1,140 requests (25 percent) were filed as
a straight-in request within the two-year
time limit and would have been
permitted under the proposed rule
change. The remaining 850 requests (75
percent) were filed as a straight-in
request after the two-year time limit and
would not have been permitted. The
median time from the close of the
customer arbitration to the filing of the
straight-in request was six years.
The 3,725 expungement requests filed
as a straight-in request also include
2,585 requests that did not follow a
(non-simplified or simplified) customer
arbitration (of the same underlying
dispute). Among the 2,585 requests, 813
requests (31 percent) were filed as a
straight-in request within six years from
the initial reporting of the disclosure to
the CRD system and would have been
permitted under the proposed rule
change. The remaining 1,772 requests
(69 percent) were filed as a straight-in
request after the six-year time limit and
would not have been permitted.
As discussed above, more than one
expungement request can be made in a
single arbitration, and the time limits
may limit the ability of an associated
person to include multiple
expungement requests in the same
straight-in request. The 3,725
expungement requests filed as a
straight-in request relate to 1,778
arbitrations. Associated persons
included more than one request to
expunge customer dispute information
in 810 of the 1,778 arbitrations. Under
the proposed time limits, associated
persons would not have been able to
include all expungement requests in at
least 225 of the 810 arbitrations.
183 The following estimates also do not take into
account the number of straight-in requests of
customer dispute information arising from a
previous (non-simplified or simplified) customer
arbitration which, under the proposed rule change,
may have been decided as part of the customer
arbitration.
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E. Arbitrators or Panels Deciding
Expungement Requests
The proposed rule change would
require that the arbitrator or panel from
a non-simplified customer arbitration
decide expungement requests during the
arbitration if the arbitration closes by
award after a hearing.184 In addition, the
proposed rule change would require the
arbitrator from a simplified customer
arbitration to decide expungement
requests if there is a full hearing, or in
a separate expungement-only hearing
after the simplified arbitration closes if
the arbitration is decided ‘‘on the
papers’’ or in a special proceeding.185
The proposed rule change would also
require a randomly selected panel from
the Special Arbitrator Roster to decide
straight-in requests.186
The proposed rule change is not
structured to increase or decrease the
likelihood that an arbitrator or panel
recommends expungement in any
individual hearing except as it relates to
the merits of the request. The proposed
rule change is structured, however, to
place an arbitrator or panel in a better
position to determine whether to
recommend expungement of customer
dispute information, and thereby help
ensure the accuracy of the customer
dispute information contained in the
CRD system and displayed through
BrokerCheck. Under the proposed rule
change and in general, the arbitrator or
panel that decides a request would
either hear the full merits of the
customer case or have additional
training and qualifications when they
are likely to receive information only
from the party requesting expungement.
In addition, panels from the Special
Arbitrator Roster would be able to
request evidence from the member firm
at which the associated person was
associated at the time the customer
dispute arose.
The proposed rule change is also
structured to reduce the potential
influence of associated persons and
member firms on the selection of the
arbitrator or panel that decides an
expungement request. First, a panel
from the Special Arbitrator Roster
would be randomly selected to decide a
straight-in request, thereby decreasing
the extent to which an associated person
and member firm with which the
associated person was associated at the
time the customer dispute arose may
184 See proposed Rules 12805(a)(1)(D)(i) and
12805(a)(2)(E)(i).
185 See proposed Rule 12800(e)(1).
186 See proposed Rule 13806(b)(1).
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together select arbitrators who are more
likely to recommend expungement.187
Second, the proposed rule change
would foreclose the option for an
associated person to withdraw a request
and seek expungement of the same
customer dispute information in a
subsequent arbitration.188 Associated
persons may exercise this option if they
believe that they have a higher
probability of obtaining an
expungement recommendation with a
different arbitrator or panel in another
arbitration, and in particular if the
associated person files a straight-in
request against the member firm with
which the broker was associated at the
time the customer dispute arose. To the
extent that the associated person and his
or her employer’s interests are aligned
and both seek to increase the likelihood
that expungement is recommended,
they would together be expected to
select arbitrators who may be more
likely to recommend expungement.189
Though these proposed amendments are
consistent with the regulatory intent to
permit expungement in limited
circumstances, it may decrease the
likelihood that associated persons are
able to obtain an award recommending
expungement.
In general, under the proposed rule
change, a three-person panel would
consider and decide expungement
187 See supra Item II.A.1.(II)B.2.b., ‘‘Straight-in
Requests and the Special Arbitrator Roster,
Composition of the Panel.’’
188 This includes the requirement for an unnamed
person to provide written consent to an on-behalfof request for it to proceed, thereby preventing an
unnamed person from subsequently arguing that
they were unaware of an expungement request on
their behalf. See proposed Rule 12805(a)(2)(A). This
also includes the requirement that a case be closed
with prejudice if an associated person withdraws a
straight-in request after a panel from the Special
Arbitrator Roster is appointed (unless the panel
decides otherwise). See proposed Rule 13805(a)(4).
In the sample period, an associated person
withdrew 155 of the 2,904 straight-in requests (five
percent) filed in cases that closed. The 155 straightin requests include 118 requests where an arbitrator
or panel was appointed.
189 A recent academic study finds evidence that
suggests parties can use previous expungement
decisions to predict the potential likelihood that an
arbitrator would recommend expungement. See
Colleen Honigsberg & Matthew Jacob, ‘‘Deleting
Misconduct: The Expungement of BrokerCheck
Records,’’ November 2018, https://wwwcdn.law.stanford.edu/wp-content/uploads/2018/11/
SSRN-id3284738.pdf. The study also finds evidence
that suggests both successful and unsuccessful
expungement attempts predict future broker
misconduct. An unsuccessful expungement attempt
is associated with an approximately four times
higher probability of future misconduct. Although
expungement decisions are based on the
information available at the time of the request,
including the facts and circumstances of the
arbitration, this finding suggests that the decisions
being made by arbitrators are related to the
potential future harm posed by the requesting
broker.
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requests during non-simplified
customer arbitrations that close by
award after a hearing and straight-in
requests. Expungement decisions by a
three-person panel may differ from
expungement decisions by a single
arbitrator. In addition, the decisions
may differ depending on the arbitrators
selected and the interaction among the
arbitrators when deciding an
expungement request. The extent to
which a three-person panel would
decide an expungement request
differently than a single arbitrator,
however, is not known.190 As discussed
above, expungement requests may be
complex to resolve, particularly straightin requests where customers typically
do not participate in the expungement
hearing. Thus, having three arbitrators
available to ask questions, request
evidence and to serve generally as factfinders in the absence of customer input
would help ensure that a complete
factual record is created to support the
arbitrators’ decision in such
expungement hearings.
F. Arbitrators or Panels Deciding
Expungement Requests—Quantitative
Description
As discussed as part of the Economic
Baseline, 5,159 of the 6,928
expungement requests sought during the
sample period were filed in an
arbitration that closed. Among the 5,159
expungement requests, 4,521 requests
(88 percent) would have required a
panel from the Special Arbitrator Roster.
The 4,521 requests include 2,456
expungement requests made during a
non-simplified customer arbitration that
closed by award without a hearing or
other than by award, and 2,065 requests
that were filed as a straight-in request
but did not relate to a previous (nonsimplified or simplified) customer
arbitration.
An arbitrator or panel from a (nonsimplified or simplified) customer
arbitration would have been required to
decide 590 of the 5,159 expungement
requests (11 percent). The 590
expungement requests include 292
requests made during a non-simplified
customer arbitration that closed by
190 Among the 2,746 expungement requests filed
as a straight-in request where an arbitrator or panel
made a decision, a similar percentage of requests
was recommended by a two- or three-person panel
(306 of 360 requests, or 85 percent) as was
recommended by a one-person panel (1,973 of 2,386
requests, or 83 percent). In addition, among the 976
expungement requests during a non-simplified or
simplified customer arbitration where an arbitrator
or panel made a decision, a similar percentage of
requests was recommended by a two- or threeperson panel (422 of 670 requests, or 63 percent)
as was recommended by a one-person panel (173
of 306 requests, or 57 percent).
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award after a hearing, 240 expungement
requests made during a simplified
customer arbitration, and 58 requests
filed as a straight-in request to expunge
customer dispute information arising
from a previous non-simplified
customer arbitration that closed by
award after a hearing.
Finally, a panel from the Special
Arbitrator Roster, or an arbitrator from
a simplified customer arbitration, would
have been required to decide the
remaining 48 arbitration requests that
relate to customer dispute information
arising from a previous simplified
customer arbitration. The arbitrator or
panel that would have decided the
request is dependent on whether an
associated person, or a party on-behalfof an associated person, would have
requested expungement during the
simplified arbitration.
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G. Participation in Expungement
Hearings
The proposed rule change would
require an associated person to appear
personally at an expungement
hearing.191 This requirement would
provide the arbitrator or panel the
opportunity to ask questions of an
associated person to better assess his or
her credibility. An associated person
would be permitted to cross-examine
and seek information from customers
who testify.192 This may provide
associated persons with the opportunity
to substantiate their arguments in
support of their expungement request.
Associated persons may incur
additional costs to appear at an
expungement hearing. The additional
costs may depend on the method of
appearance (i.e., by telephone,
videoconference, or in person), which,
under the proposed rule change, would
be determined by the arbitrator or panel.
For example, associated persons who
would otherwise not appear in person
may incur additional costs under the
proposed rule change if they are so
required. The additional costs include
the time and expense to appear, and
other direct and indirect costs (e.g.,
opportunity costs) associated with the
associated person’s appearance.
The proposed rule change would also
help encourage customer participation
in an expungement hearing. As noted
above, the proposed rule change would
require that a named associated person
request expungement during a nonsimplified customer arbitration and that
the arbitrator or panel decide the
191 See proposed Rules 12805(c)(2) and
13805(c)(2).
192 See proposed Rules 12805(c)(5)(A) and
13805(c)(5)(A).
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expungement request if the arbitration
closes by award after a hearing. In
addition, an expungement request
during a non-simplified customer
arbitration would be considered and
decided by the arbitrator or panel from
that arbitration.
Further, the proposed time limits for
filing straight-in requests may increase
customer participation during these
arbitrations. The proposed rule change
would also provide customers the
option to appear at an expungement
hearing using whichever method is
convenient for them. The proposed rule
change would also codify elements of
the Guidance that permit the customer
to testify, cross-examine the associated
person and other witnesses, present
evidence at the hearing and make
opening and closing arguments.193
H. Impact on Business and Professional
Opportunities
As a result of the proposed rule
change, associated persons may
determine that the additional costs to
seek expungement relief are higher than
the anticipated benefits. In addition,
although the proposed rule change is
intended to help ensure arbitrators
recommend expungement when
appropriate as it relates to the merits of
the request, an arbitrator or panel may
be less likely to recommend
expungement depending on the
information that becomes available for
the reasons described above. This may
cause associated persons not to seek
expungement where expungement is
likely (or unlikely) to be recommended.
Associated persons who no longer
seek, or are not able to expunge
customer dispute information from the
CRD system and its display through
BrokerCheck, or are delayed in doing so,
may experience a loss of business and
professional opportunities. The loss of
business and professional opportunities
by one associated person, however, may
be the gain of another. Associated
persons who may benefit in this regard
include those who still determine that
the additional costs to seek
expungement relief under the proposed
rule change is less than the anticipated
193 Other amendments to the proposed rule
change would also help encourage customer
participation. For example, the proposed rule
change would allow customers to be represented at
an expungement hearing and thereby mitigate any
potential concern they may have regarding a direct
confrontation with the associated person. In
addition, the proposed rule change provides that
FINRA would notify the customer of the time and
place of the expungement hearing. Customers
would still retain the option to participate in the
expungement hearing or provide their position on
the expungement request in writing. The costs to
participate would therefore be borne at the
customers’ discretion.
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benefits and continue to seek
expungement of customer dispute
information, and other associated
persons who do not have similar
disclosures.
A firm or associated person can also
initiate an expungement proceeding
directly in a court of competent
jurisdiction without first going through
any arbitration proceeding. The
proposed rule change may incent firms
or associated persons to initiate an
expungement proceeding directly in a
court of competent jurisdiction without
first going through any arbitration
proceeding. For some firms and
associated persons, the anticipated costs
to first go through arbitration may be
greater than the similar costs to proceed
directly in a court of competent
jurisdiction. Firms and associated
persons who would otherwise first go
through arbitration as a result of the
proposed rule change may incur
additional costs to seek expungement
relief.
The number of firms or associated
persons who would instead initiate an
expungement proceeding directly in a
court of competent jurisdiction is
dependent not only on the additional
costs under the proposed rule change,
but the costs a firm or associated person
would expect to incur in the different
forums to initiate an expungement
proceeding. This information is
generally not available, and accordingly
the potential effect of the proposed rule
change on direct-to-court expungement
requests is uncertain.
I. Other Economic Effects
Finally, the proposed rule change may
have other marginal economic effects.
First, the prohibition of a subsequent
expungement request would decrease
the potential inefficient allocation of
resources resulting from a subsequent
request that would have resulted in the
same decision (i.e., denial) as the first.
The resources of the forum allocated to
the additional expungement request
could instead be used for other claims
or requests that were not previously
adjudicated or for other purposes.194
Second, the proposed rule change
may increase the efficiency of the forum
by requiring that a party provide certain
information when filing an
expungement request. The information
includes identification of the customer
dispute information that is the subject of
the request, and whether expungement
of the same customer dispute
information was previously requested
194 The resources relate to the specific costs to
administer the claim, as well as the overall
attendant costs to administer the forum.
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and, if so, how it was decided. This
would increase the efficiency of the
forum by enabling FINRA to identify
and track a request through the
expungement process, and by alerting
arbitrators and FINRA to another
expungement request of the same
customer dispute information. The
efficiency of the forum would also
increase by requiring an unnamed
person to consent to an on-behalf-of
expungement request in writing. This
would help ensure that an unnamed
person is aware of the request and
prevent another expungement request
by the unnamed person of the same
customer dispute information.
In addition, the proposed rule change
may affect the value of the customer
dispute information to describe the
conduct of associated persons. The
change in the value of the information
depends on the merit of the disclosures
that would have otherwise been
expunged. The merit of these
disclosures also depends on many
factors which are difficult to predict.
These factors include the incentive of
parties to file an expungement request
under the proposed rule change, the
decisions by the arbitrator or panel to
recommend expungement dependent on
the information that is available, and the
merit of the customer dispute
information that would have otherwise
been sought to be expunged.
As stated above, the proposed rule
change is not structured to increase or
decrease the likelihood that an arbitrator
or panel recommends expungement in
any individual hearing except as it
relates to the merits of the request. The
proposed rule change may, however,
reduce the incentive for an associated
person to request expungement even
when warranted. The effect of the
proposed rule change on the extent to
which the customer dispute information
available in the CRD system (and its
public display through BrokerCheck)
accurately describes the conduct of
associated persons is, therefore,
uncertain.
4. Alternatives Considered
Alternatives to the proposed rule
change include amendments that were
proposed in Notice 17–42. Notice 17–42
proposed to restrict when a party can
file or serve an expungement request
during a customer arbitration to 60 days
before the first hearing session begins.
Although 60 days would provide a
customer with more time to address an
expungement request, 60 days may
further restrict a party from seeking
expungement during a customer
arbitration relative to the 30 days before
the first scheduled hearing begins in the
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proposed rule change. FINRA believes
that the proposed 30-day period would
provide customers with enough time to
address an expungement request, and
FINRA with sufficient time to notify the
states of the request. FINRA also
believes that 30 days would reduce the
potential that parties would lose their
ability to file an expungement request
during an arbitration.
Notice 17–42 also proposed that an
arbitrator or panel find that the
customer dispute information has ‘‘no
investor protection or regulatory value,’’
and that there must be a unanimous
rather than a majority decision by a
panel to recommend expungement.
These proposed amendments may
increase the difficulty for an associated
person to receive an expungement
recommendation, and thereby deter an
associated person from seeking
expungement. After considering the
comments, FINRA has determined not
to propose that the panel must find ‘‘no
investor protection or regulatory value’’
to recommend expungement. FINRA
agrees with some commenters that the
standard may, if codified into rule
language, create confusion among
arbitrators and the potential for
inconsistent application among different
arbitrators and panels.195 A majority
decision is also consistent with what is
required for other decisions in customer
and industry arbitrations. FINRA also
believes that the overall proposal,
coupled with the existing standards in
FINRA Rule 2080, would be sufficient to
help preserve in the CRD system
information that is valuable to investors
and regulators, while allowing
associated persons to remove
information that is inaccurate.
Another alternative to the proposed
rule change includes different time
limits for an associated person to file a
straight-in request. Although shorter
(longer) time limits may increase
(decrease) customer participation in the
proceedings and the likelihood that the
panel from the Special Arbitrator Roster
receives the relevant evidence and
testimony to decide an expungement
request, shorter (longer) time limits may
further (less) constrain an associated
195 FINRA notes that in its Order approving
NASD Rule 2130 (now FINRA Rule 2080), which
describes the current findings that arbitrators must
make to recommend expungement, the SEC stated
that ‘‘it believes the proposal strikes the appropriate
balance between permitting members and
associated persons to remove information from the
CRD system that holds no regulatory value, while
at the same time preserving information on the CRD
system that is valuable to investors and regulators.’’
See Securities Exchange Act Release No. 48933
(December 16, 2003) 68 FR 74667, 74672 (December
24, 2003) (Order Approving File No. SR–NASD–
2002–168).
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person from filing a straight-in request
or including more than one
expungement request in the same
straight-in request. FINRA believes that
the time limits proposed herein would
facilitate customer participation but also
provide associated persons sufficient
opportunity to file a straight-in request.
C. Self-Regulatory Organization’s
Statement on Comments on the
Proposed Rule Change Received From
Members, Participants, or Others
In December 2017, FINRA published
Notice 17–42, requesting comment on
proposed amendments to the
expungement process including
establishing a roster of arbitrators with
additional training and specific
backgrounds or experience from which
a panel would be selected to decide an
associated person’s request for
expungement of customer dispute
information. The arbitrators from this
roster would decide expungement
requests where the customer arbitration
is not resolved on the merits or the
associated person files a straight-in
request to expunge customer dispute
information. FINRA received 70
comments in response to Notice 17–
42.196 A copy of Notice 17–42 is
attached [sic] as Exhibit 2a. A list of
comment letters received in response to
Notice 17–42 is attached [sic] as Exhibit
2b and copies of the comment letters are
attached [sic] as Exhibit 2c.
In general, individual commenters
supported some aspects of the proposal
and raised concerns with others. A
summary of the comments and FINRA’s
responses are discussed below.
1. Requirement To Request
Expungement During a Customer
Arbitration
In Notice 17–42, FINRA proposed that
an associated person who is named as
a party in a customer arbitration must
request expungement during the
arbitration or be prohibited from seeking
to expunge the customer dispute
information arising from the customer’s
statement of claim during any
subsequent proceeding under the Codes.
NASAA and PIABA supported the
proposed limitation. NASAA stated that
the limitation would help ensure
timelier expungement requests and help
avoid requests made years after the
underlying customer arbitration has
closed. PIABA stated that it did not
believe that requiring associated persons
to request expungement during the
customer arbitration would result in
more expungement requests because the
196 All references to commenters are to the
comment letters as listed in Exhibit 2b.
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rule proposal contained ‘‘heightened
standards applicable to expungement
requests’’ and a ‘‘clear process for
requesting expungement following the
close of the customer case,’’ which may
cause ‘‘associated persons [to] be more
deliberate in making expungement
requests.’’
Some commenters opposed the
limitation for a variety of reasons.197
Cornell stated that it ‘‘could lead
associated persons to request
expungement in every dispute in order
to preserve the right to request
expungement.’’ Keesal stated that these
additional expungement requests could
result in increased expenses to
associated persons and member firms
and ‘‘could impede the goals of
protecting investors and ensuring that
FINRA arbitration remains an expedient
and cost-effective forum.’’ Herskovits
expressed a concern that an associated
person ‘‘may be unaware of the
important rights he is waiving by failing
to file a request for expungement in the
underlying arbitration.’’ Saretsky,
responding to FINRA’s concern that
customers and documents may be
unavailable when an associated person
files a separate expungement request
years after the customer arbitration
closed, stated that customers can be
located through counsel or internet
searches, and that securities industry
rules mandate the retention of important
customer and account records for
several years. JonesBell and Behr stated
that the requirement to request
expungement during the customer
arbitration should apply only to named
associated persons who have also
appeared in the arbitration.
FINRA believes that requiring an
associated person who is named in a
customer arbitration to request
expungement during that arbitration or
be prohibited from doing so should help
limit expungement requests filed years
after the customer arbitration concludes,
facilitate customer participation in
expungement hearings and help ensure
that relevant evidence does not become
stale or unavailable.198 The proposed
requirement would also help ensure that
the panel that has heard the merits of
the customer’s claim at a hearing would
decide the expungement request.
Accordingly, FINRA believes that all
associated persons who are named in
non-simplified arbitrations should be
required to request expungement during
the arbitration, and that the requirement
should not depend on whether the
197 See Behr, Cornell, Herskovits, JonesBell,
Keesal and Saretsky.
198 See supra Item II.B.3.D., ‘‘Time Limits for
Straight-in Requests—Quantitative Description.’’
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associated person has chosen to enter an
appearance in response to the
complaint. In addition, FINRA notes
that if the named associated person
requests expungement, under the
proposed rule change, the associated
person would be required to appear at
the expungement hearing.
The proposed amendments would
also provide a detailed framework
governing the expungement process,
which should help ensure that both
associated persons and customers are
aware of their rights.
FINRA acknowledges commenters’
concerns that the proposed limitation
could potentially result in an increase in
the number of expungement requests
and their associated costs. To address
this concern, as well as the related
concern that the requirement could
result in expungement requests by
associated persons simply to preserve
their right to request expungement,
FINRA has modified the proposed rule
to allow the associated person to make
the request 30 days before the hearing
in the customer arbitration.199 This
should provide sufficient time during
the customer arbitration for the
associated person to evaluate whether
an expungement request is warranted
and help avoid unnecessary
expungement requests.
2. Deadline To File Expungement
Request During a Customer Arbitration
In Notice 17–42, FINRA proposed that
an expungement request made in a
pleading during a customer arbitration
must be made no later than 60 days
before the first hearing session begins.
Three commenters opposed the
proposal, stating that the 60-day filing
deadline was an impractical or
unnecessary restriction that could cause
an associated person to miss the
deadline and, therefore, an opportunity
to file a request.200 These commenters
suggested that the proposal retain the
status quo, which allows an associated
person to request expungement up to
and during any hearing. One
commenter, Keesal, supported a
deadline of 60 days before the first
scheduled hearing date, provided,
however, that the associated person
‘‘has appeared in [the] Underlying
Customer Case.’’ Keesal stated that this
would ‘‘ensure[ ] that all participants’’
were ‘‘on notice of the issues to be
addressed and determined at the
evidentiary hearing.’’ SIFMA stated that
the proposed requirement ‘‘to file for
expungement 60 days prior to the first
199 See supra Item II.A.1.(II)A.1.a.i., ‘‘Method of
Requesting Expungement.’’
200 See Behr, JonesBell and SIFMA.
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scheduled hearing date’’ was
impractical and would require the
payment of expungement fees even
though a large portion of cases settle
within 60 days of the hearing.
After considering the comments,
FINRA does not believe that it is
necessary to require a 60-day filing
deadline. Instead, the proposed rule
change would require that an
expungement request be filed no later
than 30 days before the first scheduled
hearing.201 This should provide the
parties with sufficient case preparation
time, as the expungement issues will
overlap with the issues raised by the
customer’s claim. If a named associated
person seeks to request expungement
after the 30-day filing deadline, the
panel would be required to decide
whether to grant an extension and
permit the request.202 The purpose of
the deadline is to provide the parties
other than the associated person with
sufficient notice that expungement will
be addressed at the hearing.
In addition, FINRA has determined
that requiring the party to request
expungement at least 30 days before the
first ‘‘hearing session,’’ which is
typically the initial pre-hearing
conference (‘‘IPHC’’) rather than the first
hearing on the merits, may not provide
the requesting party with sufficient time
to make an informed decision about
whether to request expungement.203
Therefore, FINRA has modified the
proposal to require that an expungement
request must be made 30 days before the
first scheduled ‘‘hearing’’ begins to
provide time for the requesting party to
make a better-informed decision.204
3. Panel From the Customer Arbitration
Decides Expungement Requests Where
the Customer Arbitration Closes by
Award After a Hearing
In Notice 17–42, FINRA proposed that
if the customer arbitration closes by
award, the panel from the customer
arbitration would consider and decide
the expungement request during the
customer arbitration.
Some commenters disagreed with this
aspect of the proposal and suggested
201 See supra Item II.A.1.(II)A.1.a.i., ‘‘Method of
Requesting Expungement.’’
202 See supra note 37.
203 The term ‘‘hearing session’’ means any
meeting between the parties and arbitrator(s) of four
hours or less, including a hearing or a prehearing
conference. See FINRA Rules 12100(p) and
13100(p). The IPHC is scheduled after the panel is
appointed. During the IPHC, the panel will set
discovery, briefing, and motions deadlines,
schedule subsequent hearing sessions, and address
other preliminary matters. The parties may agree,
however, to forgo the IPHC. See generally FINRA
Rules 12500 and 13500.
204 Under the Codes, a ‘‘hearing’’ means a hearing
on the merits. See supra note 21.
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that a panel selected from the Special
Arbitrator Roster should decide all
expungement requests, even if the
customer arbitration was decided by an
award.205 For example, PIABA stated
that a panel from the Special Arbitrator
Roster should decide the expungement
request separate from the customer’s
claim because the ‘‘decision a panel is
asked to make with respect to
expungement is different than deciding
whether or not to find liability on a
customer claim’’ and because it is
‘‘unfair to require a customer to
participate in a potentially lengthy
expungement hearing that they did not
ask for.’’ Grebenik stated that the
expungement request should be
evaluated separately by an independent
panel because the arbitrator may ‘‘have
bias’’ and ‘‘has heard comments and
issues from the customer [about] the
actual claim.’’ AdvisorLaw stated that
all expungement requests should
receive the ‘‘same level of review and
consideration by a specially trained
arbitration panel.’’
Cornell expressed a concern that the
proposed requirement could ‘‘transform
hearings designed to determine the
merits of a customer dispute into
lengthy expungement hearings.’’ Cornell
proposed, as an alternative, that the
same panel from the customer
arbitration make the expungement
determination, but do so in a separate
proceeding to avoid inconveniencing
the customer.
Keesal questioned whether the
proposed requirement that the panel
from the customer arbitration decide the
expungement request if the customer
arbitration ‘‘closes by award’’ would
require the panel to decide an
expungement request if the cases closes
as a result of an order dismissing the
case.
In response to the comments, FINRA
is clarifying that the panel from the
customer arbitration would be required
to decide the expungement request and
include its decision in the award if the
arbitration ‘‘closes by award after a
hearing’’ instead of where the
arbitration ‘‘closes by award.’’ FINRA
believes that where the panel from the
customer arbitration has heard the
parties’ presentation of the evidence
about the customer’s claim, that same
panel is best situated to decide the
expungement request. In addition, it
would generally be more efficient and
less costly for the panel from the
205 See AdvisorLaw, Georgia State, Grebenik,
PIABA, St. John’s, Tinklenberg and UNLV. In
addition, St. John’s ‘‘strongly agree[d] with
requiring associated or unnamed persons to wait
until the conclusion of a customer’s case to file an
expungement request.’’
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customer arbitration to decide the
expungement request in these
circumstances. Although FINRA Rule
2080(b)(1) requires the panel to make a
separate, different determination than
its determination on the merits of the
customer’s claim, the evidence offered
with respect to both determinations
should generally overlap. Accordingly,
FINRA does not believe that it would
overly burden the parties if, when the
customer arbitration closes by award
after a hearing, the panel must also
decide the expungement request in
addition to the merits of the customer’s
claim.
4. Qualifications of Arbitrators on the
Special Arbitrator Roster
In Notice 17–42, FINRA proposed that
to qualify for the Special Arbitrator
Roster, a public chairperson would be
required to: (i) Have completed
enhanced expungement training; (ii) be
admitted to the practice of law in at
least one jurisdiction; and (iii) have five
years’ experience in litigation, federal or
state securities litigation, administrative
law, service as a securities regulator or
service as a judge. Commenters
generally supported the proposed
requirements,206 but were split on
whether the members of the Special
Arbitrator Roster should be required to
be attorneys.207 One commenter, Black,
did not oppose the proposed
qualifications but suggested that they
would likely result in fewer eligible
arbitrators for straight-in requests.
PIABA stated that the Special Arbitrator
Roster should be made up of attorneys
because it would be difficult for FINRA,
in some areas of the country, to
alternatively fill the Special Arbitrator
Roster with local chair-qualified
arbitrators that had served on three
arbitrations through award. PIABA also
stated that arbitrators with legal training
may be better equipped to make the
distinction between the FINRA Rule
2080 grounds for expungement and
deciding the merits of the underlying
claim. Keesal, in contrast, stated that
there was no rationale for allowing nonattorneys to decide expungement
requests made during the customer
206 See, e.g., SIFMA (supporting the proposal, and
stating that more highly qualified and trained
arbitrators should lead to a more efficient and fair
process); NASAA (supporting the proposal, and
stating that the extent to which the panels truly
appreciate the nuanced regulatory issues related to
expungement largely depended on the content and
effectiveness of the proposed enhanced
expungement training).
207 See AdvisorLaw, FSI, Gocek, Keesel, Osiason,
Rodriguez and White (all opposing the requirement
that members of the Special Arbitrator Roster be
attorneys). But cf. Cornell, Georgia State, NASAA,
PIABA, Schlein, SIFMA, St. John’s and Tinklenberg
(all supporting the requirement).
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arbitration, but not brought as a standalone claim.
Some commenters also expressed
concerns that the arbitrators on the
Special Arbitrator Roster were not
required to have securities industry
experience.208 FSI stated that without
this background ‘‘it may be difficult to
appreciate whether information has
regulatory significance or investor
protection value.’’ AdvisorLaw stated
that ‘‘[r]equiring all expungement
arbitrators to have a minimum of five
years’ experience with the financial
services industry [would be] appropriate
considering the complexity of
expungement requests in cases
involving customer dispute
information.’’ In contrast, Public Citizen
suggested that at least one FINRA
employee who meets the requirements
of the Special Arbitrator Roster be a
member of every three-person panel that
considers an expungement request.
After considering the comments,
FINRA has determined not to propose
requiring that the members of the
Special Arbitrator Roster be attorneys;
instead, they would be required to be
public arbitrators who have evidenced
successful completion of, and agreement
with, enhanced expungement training,
and have served as an arbitrator through
award on at least four customer-initiated
arbitrations.209 FINRA believes that the
non-attorneys on its roster who meet
these qualifications and complete
enhanced expungement training should
be appropriately knowledgeable and
experienced to decide straight-in
requests. The requirement that the
arbitrators on the Special Arbitrator
Roster be public arbitrators should help
ensure that the arbitrators are free of
bias. The requirement that they have
served on four cases through to award
would help ensure that the members of
the Special Arbitrator Roster have the
necessary knowledge and experience to
conduct hearings in the forum.
208 See AdvisorLaw, Behr, FSI and JonesBell.
Behr and JonesBell also criticized the proposal as
allowing claimants’ attorneys ‘‘whose business is
the ligation of customer complaints’’ to serve on the
Special Arbitrator Roster. FINRA notes, however,
that the proposal requires that arbitrators on the
Special Arbitrator Roster be public arbitrators, and
that FINRA’s definition of public arbitrators
excludes, among other persons, those who devote
20 percent or more of their professional time to
representing parties in disputes concerning
investment accounts or transactions, or
employment relationships within the financial
industry. See FINRA Rules 12100(aa) and 13100(x);
see also supra note 8.
209 See proposed Rule 13806(b)(2)(B). In addition,
to qualify for the Special Arbitrator Roster, the
arbitrators must be chairpersons and, therefore, will
have completed the training that arbitrators must
complete before they can be added to the
chairperson roster. See also supra note 80.
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Although FINRA believes that a
sufficient number of arbitrators on its
roster would meet these additional
qualifications, if the Commission
approves the proposed rule change,
FINRA would engage in efforts to recruit
arbitrators for the Special Arbitrator
Roster. FINRA notes that its Office of
Dispute Resolution has embarked on an
aggressive campaign to recruit new
arbitrators, with a particular focus on
adding arbitrators from diverse
backgrounds, professions and
geographical locations.210 FINRA’s
commitment and focus on this critical
initiative have resulted in increases in
under-represented categories of
arbitrators.211 FINRA believes its
continued commitment to this
important initiative will help the forum
improve the quality, depth and diversity
of its public chairperson roster.
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5. Special Arbitrator Roster Decides
Expungement Requests if the Customer
Arbitration Closes Other Than by Award
or by Award Without a Hearing
In Notice 17–42, FINRA proposed that
if the customer arbitration closes other
than by award (e.g., the parties settle the
arbitration), the panel in that arbitration
would not decide the associated
person’s expungement request. Instead,
the associated person would be
permitted to file an expungement
request as a new claim under the
Industry Code against the member firm
at which he or she was associated at the
time of the events giving rise to the
customer dispute.
The SEC Investor Advocate supported
the proposal because FINRA’s data
showed that where the arbitration case
was not decided on the merits, the
expungement rate was ‘‘simply too high
for an extraordinary remedy.’’
(emphasis in original). NASAA also
supported the proposal, stating that
‘‘post-settlement expungement hearings
often consist of a one-sided presentation
of the facts’’ because ‘‘investors and
their counsel have little incentive to
participate after the customer’s concerns
have been resolved.’’
Some commenters disagreed with the
proposal to require the associated
person to file a new arbitration under
the Industry Code if the customer
arbitration closes other than by award,
as inefficient or burdensome on
associated persons.212 As an alternative,
210 See
Our Commitment to Achieving Arbitrator
and Mediator Diversity at FINRA, https://
www.finra.org/arbitration-mediation/ourcommitment-achieving-arbitrator-and-mediatordiversity-finra.
211 See supra note 210.
212 See Behr, Herskovits, JonesBell, Saretsky and
SIFMA. Herskovits also stated that ‘‘[financial
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SIFMA suggested that the panel from
the customer arbitration decide the
request; but, to address FINRA’s
concern for greater training and
increased qualifications for those
arbitrators determining expungement,
SIFMA suggested that the proposed rule
change require that at least one
arbitrator on every three-person panel
be selected from the Special Arbitrator
Roster at the inception of each customer
arbitration.
Saretsky stated that associated
persons should be able to name the
customer, and that the ‘‘minor
inconvenience’’ to the customer was
outweighed by the harm to the
associated person. PIABA stated that it
would be ‘‘inappropriate’’ to name
customers. St. John’s ‘‘support[ed]
allowing the proposed expungement
process to proceed without the customer
having to be named a party to the
request.’’
Schlein expressed concerns that a
former employing member firm may
have ‘‘little or no economic incentive to
cooperate in an expungement
proceeding,’’ and that it ‘‘would also be
difficult for the panel to elicit
potentially relevant facts’’ where the
‘‘economic and reputational interests of
the associated person and the employer
are aligned.’’ Schlein also stated that an
‘‘aggrieved customer has no economic
incentive to participate in an
expungement proceeding that occurs
only after the underlying case has
concluded.’’ Schlein also expressed
concern that expungement requests
would be referred to the Special
Arbitrator Roster even if the matter
settled on the eve of hearing, when it
may be more efficient and promote
investor protection to require the
existing panel to hear the expungement
request. Schlein stated that ‘‘FINRA
could ameliorate the possibility that a
panel might receive one-sided
information’’ by (i) providing the
expungement panel with significant
filings from the underlying customer
dispute, (ii) permitting the panel to
review the parties’ settlement papers
and (iii) giving the associated person,
firm, and the customer the right to
provide the panel with transcripts of the
underlying customer proceeding.
FINRA believes that where there has
not been a hearing on the merits of the
customer’s claim, the members of the
Special Arbitrator Roster, who would be
public chairpersons who have served on
at least four customer arbitrations in
which a hearing was held and received
enhanced expungement training, would
be better situated to decide
expungement requests than the panel
from the customer arbitration. FINRA
does not believe that requiring the
associated person to file a new
arbitration under the Industry Code
would unduly burden the associated
person—instead of presenting evidence
related to the expungement request to
the arbitrators in the customer
arbitration in a separate expungement
hearing, they would instead present the
evidence supporting the expungement
request to a panel randomly selected
from the Special Arbitrator Roster.
FINRA shares commenters’ concerns
that the factual record could be less
well-developed where a straight-in
request is filed against a member firm
and the associated person or member
firm’s interests are aligned, or where the
customer does not participate. FINRA
does not believe, however, that the
customer should be named as a
respondent or be required to participate
in an expungement proceeding after the
customer’s claim has been resolved (e.g.,
after the claim is settled). Instead, the
proposed rule change addresses
concerns that straight-in requests filed
against the member firm may be nonadversarial or lack customer
participation by, among other things (i)
requiring that straight-in requests be
decided by three randomly selected
public chairpersons with enhanced
training and experience,213 (ii) requiring
the panel to review the settlement
documents,214 (iii) granting the panel
the explicit authority to request from the
associated person, the member firm at
which he or she was associated at the
time the customer dispute arose or other
party requesting expungement, any
documentary, testimonial or other
evidence that it deems relevant to the
expungement request,215 and (iv)
including provisions to encourage and
facilitate customer participation in
expungement hearings.216
In response to commenters’ concerns,
FINRA has modified the language in the
proposed rule change to require that a
straight-in request be filed against the
advisors] will respond to the proposed rule by filing
a counterclaim or cross claim for expungement in
the customer arbitration, thus preventing the
customer arbitration from closing before a hearing
is held on expungement or the [financial advisors’]
other claims for relief.’’ FINRA notes, however, that
under the proposed rule change, a request for
expungement relief would not prevent a customer
arbitration from closing.
213 See supra Item II.A.1.(II)B.2.b., ‘‘Straight-in
Requests and the Special Arbitrator Roster,
Composition of the Panel.’’
214 See proposed Rules 12805(c)(7) and
13805(c)(7).
215 See proposed Rules 12805(c)(6) and
13805(c)(6).
216 See supra Item II.A.1.(II)D.3., ‘‘Customer’s
Participation during the Expungement Hearing.’’
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member firm at which he or she was
associated ‘‘at the time the customer
dispute arose,’’ consistent with the
language used in other FINRA rules,
instead of ‘‘at the time of the events
giving rise to the customer dispute.’’ 217
6. Three Randomly Selected Arbitrators
Decide Straight-In Requests
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In Notice 17–42, FINRA proposed that
the NLSS would randomly select three
public chairpersons to serve on the
Special Arbitrator Roster who would
decide the request for expungement,
and that the first arbitrator selected
would be the chairperson. The parties
would not be permitted to agree to fewer
than three arbitrators or to the use of
pre-selected arbitrators. The associated
person seeking expungement would not
be permitted to strike any arbitrators,
but would be able to challenge a
selected arbitrator for cause.
PIABA and AdvisorLaw supported
the proposed random selection of three
arbitrators. PIABA stated that the
random selection of three arbitrators
would ‘‘reduce the risk of arbitrators
being concerned about ruling against an
associated person for fear they may not
be selected for another panel.’’
Other commenters opposed the
proposed rule change. SIFMA expressed
concerns that not permitting parties to
rank and strike arbitrators would
remove the parties’ involvement and
input.218 SIFMA also stated that there
was no compelling need to use three
rather than a single arbitrator, and that
the proposal would increase the
financial burden on registered
representatives seeking expungement.
Walter stated that a single FINRAqualified arbitrator with the special
qualifications would be ‘‘more than
qualified to make a determination as to
expungement’’ and that ‘‘[h]aving to
coordinate the schedules of three
arbitrators will delay the processing and
will impose unnecessarily high
additional costs on all parties
involved.’’ 219 Tinklenberg opposed the
three-person panel requirement because
of the associated costs. Baritz stated that
the three-person panel requirement
217 See, e.g., FINRA Rules 12901(a)(1)(C) and
13903(b); see also Kessal.
218 SIFMA also proposed that ‘‘to preserve
arbitrator neutrality and foster greater
transparency,’’ FINRA make publicly available all
training materials, communications with arbitrators
regarding expungement, and documents related to
the addition, removal or exclusion of any arbitrators
from the roster. FINRA notes that making such
communications and documents publicly available
could have a chilling effect on arbitrator
recruitment and communications. FINRA does,
however, make expungement training materials
publicly available. See supra note 82.
219 See also Saretsky.
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would increase expenses to associated
persons and the ‘‘time necessary to rank
and choose a panel,’’ and ‘‘significantly
delay the process.’’
Keesal opposed the random selection
of three arbitrators as unfair to
associated persons, and suggested that
FINRA ‘‘randomly select a minimum of
12 proposed arbitrators to serve on an
expungement case, from which the
associated person and anyone else
involved in the case can rank and strike
the proposed panelists.’’
FINRA notes that since straight-in
requests may be complex, may not be
actively opposed by another party and
the customer or customer’s
representative typically does not appear
at the hearing, having three arbitrators
from the Special Arbitrator Roster
available to ask questions and request
evidence would help ensure that a
complete factual record is developed to
support the arbitrators’ decision. In
addition, FINRA believes that requiring
two out of three randomly selected
public chairpersons with enhanced
training and qualifications to agree that
expungement is appropriate in straightin requests should help FINRA maintain
the integrity of its CRD records and
ensure that expungement is
recommended in limited circumstances
and only when one of the FINRA Rule
2080(b)(1) grounds applies.
FINRA does not believe that selecting
three rather than one arbitrator would
overly burden the parties during the
proceeding or result in undue delay. As
the parties would not be permitted to
rank or strike these arbitrators, this
should shorten the average length of the
proceeding.220 In addition, pursuant to
FINRA Rule 13403, FINRA would send
the lists generated by the NLSS to all
parties at the same time, within
approximately 30 days after the last
answer is due, regardless of the parties’
agreement to extend any answer due
date.
FINRA recognizes that the proposed
random arbitrator selection process
would limit party input on arbitrator
selection. However, the arbitrators on
the Special Arbitrator Roster would
have the experience, qualifications and
training necessary to conduct a fair and
impartial expungement hearing in
accordance with the proposed rules, and
to render a recommendation based on a
complete factual record developed
during the expungement hearing.
220 Under the Codes, the lists of ranked arbitrators
must be completed and returned to the Director no
more than 20 days after the date the Director sends
the lists to the parties. See., e.g., FINRA Rules
12403(c)(3) and 13404. However, the parties may
agree to extend the due date. See FINRA Rules
12105 and 13105.
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FINRA believes that the higher
standards that the arbitrators must meet
to serve on the Special Arbitrator Roster
should mitigate the impact of the
absence of party input on the selection
of arbitrators. In addition, associated
persons and member firms would still
be permitted to challenge any arbitrator
for cause.221
7. Simplified Arbitrations
In Notice 17–42, FINRA proposed to
require that an associated person or
unnamed person wait until the
conclusion of a customer’s simplified
arbitration case to file an expungement
request, which would be filed under the
Industry Code against the member firm
at which he or she was associated at the
time the customer dispute rose and
would be heard by a panel selected from
the Special Arbitrator Roster.
Some commenters supported the
proposal.222 PIABA stated that it would
address a flaw in the current process,
whereby a hearing is held to consider
expungement even if the customer has
not requested a hearing under FINRA
Rule 12800, and that it would eliminate
delays in securing an award because the
arbitrator is considering the request for
expungement. PIABA also stated that a
single arbitrator should not be permitted
to decide an expungement request in a
simplified arbitration because the goals
of the proposed amendments should not
be affected simply because the
misconduct involved $50,000 or less.223
The SEC Investor Advocate stated that
it would be easier for a broker to
convince one arbitrator to recommend
expungement. St. John’s stated that
‘‘separating the expungement request
from the underlying customer case’’
should result in ‘‘faster decisions in
simplified cases.’’
Some commenters opposed the
proposed change and stated that the
arbitrator who heard the evidence in the
underlying simplified customer
arbitration would be most qualified to
determine an expungement request, and
that it was unfair to impose the burden
of a subsequent arbitration on the
associated person in this
circumstance.224
After considering the comments,
FINRA has revised the proposed rule
change to provide that if a party
requests expungement during a
simplified arbitration, the single
arbitrator from the simplified arbitration
would be required to decide the
221 See
proposed Rule 13806(b)(4).
NASAA, PIABA, The SEC Investor
Advocate, St. John’s and UNLV.
223 See also UNLV.
224 See Behr, JonesBell and Keesal.
222 See
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expungement request, regardless of how
the simplified arbitration case closes
(e.g., even if the case settles).225 FINRA
believes that it is appropriate for the
single arbitrator in a simplified
arbitration case to decide expungement
requests, regardless of how the
underlying case closes, due to the lower
monetary requirement and generally
less complex nature of these cases. To
address concerns that customers should
not be required to participate in a
hearing addressing expungement
requests in simplified arbitrations, the
proposed rule change would require
arbitrators to hold a separate
expungement-only hearing after the
customer’s dispute is decided to
consider the expungement request if the
customer elects to have his or her claim
decided on the papers or through an
Option Two special proceeding. The
arbitrator would be required to issue a
subsequent, separate award in
connection with the expungement-only
hearing.226
8. Fees That Parties Will Incur To File
a New Claim Under the Industry Code
To Request Expungement
Some commenters expressed concerns
that if an associated person were
required to file a separate claim under
the Industry Code to request
expungement after the customer
arbitration closes other than by award,
the member firm and associated person
would be assessed the filing fee,
member surcharge and process fees
twice, in both the underlying customer
arbitration and the separate straight-in
request.227 SIFMA stated that this could
increase the costs of expungement and
have the ‘‘indirect effect of increasing
the costs of settlement, potentially
discouraging settlement in smaller cases
due to the increased costs associated
with expungement.’’
FINRA believes that it is appropriate
to assess the member surcharge and
process fee for straight-in requests
because they are separate arbitrations
before a separate panel of specially
trained arbitrators. The member firm,
having not previously paid a member
surcharge and process fee for the
expungement request, would be
assessed these fees when and if a
straight-in request is filed. FINRA
would not, however, assess a second
filing fee when an associated person
files a straight-in request if the
associated person, or the requesting
party if it is an on-behalf-of request, has
previously paid the filing fee to request
225 See
proposed Rule 12800(e)(1).
proposed Rule 12800(e)(1)(A).
227 See Janney, Keesal and SIFMA.
226 See
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expungement of the same customer
dispute information during a customer
arbitration.
9. Arbitrators ‘‘Recommend’’ Rather
Than ‘‘Grant’’ Expungement
In Notice 17–42, FINRA requested
comment on whether to revise FINRA
Rules 12805 and 13805 to state that the
panel may ‘‘recommend’’ rather than
‘‘grant’’ expungement if the FINRA Rule
2080 standards are satisfied. Several
commenters supported the revision as a
clarifying change that would more
accurately reflect the panel’s role in the
expungement process.228 For example,
PIABA stated that after the panel
recommends expungement, under
FINRA Rule 2080 the member or
associated person ‘‘must obtain an order
from a court of competent jurisdiction
confirming the arbitration award
containing expungement relief.’’
AdvisorLaw and Tinklenberg opposed
the proposed rule change, with
AdvisorLaw stating that ‘‘grant’’ should
be retained because ‘‘[i]t has long been
established that the decisions made in
arbitration are final and binding upon
the parties,’’ and that ‘‘[c]hanging the
language of the Rule from the word
‘grant’ to ‘recommend’ may lessen the
perceived binding effect of the
decision.’’ 229
FINRA believes that ‘‘recommend’’
more accurately captures the panel’s
authority in the expungement process.
Pursuant to FINRA Rule 2080, FINRA
will only expunge customer dispute
information after a court of competent
jurisdiction enters an order requiring it
to do so. Accordingly, the proposed rule
change would change the word ‘‘grant’’
to ‘‘recommend’’ in proposed Rules
12805 and 13805.230
10. Unanimity of Decision
In Notice 17–42, FINRA proposed that
to recommend expungement, a threeperson panel of arbitrators would be
required to agree unanimously to
recommend expungement. Some
commenters opposed the unanimity
requirement as making it too difficult to
obtain expungement or because it was
inconsistent with the ability of a
customer to prevail by a majority
decision.231 SIFMA, for example, stated
that the unanimity requirement would
‘‘impinge upon the fundamental fairness
of the expungement process in
228 See Black, Cornell, Georgia State, Gocek,
Keesal and PIABA.
229 See also Wellington.
230 See supra note 10.
231 See AdvisorLaw, Behr, Gocek, Hagenstein,
Higgenbotham, Janney, JonesBell, Keesal, Leven,
Mahoney, Saretsky, SIFMA, Smart, Speicher,
Tinklenberg and White.
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providing an effective balance to the
allegation-based complaint reporting
regime and will have a significant
impact on registered representatives’
ability to protect their livelihoods and
reputations.’’ JonesBell and Behr stated
that ‘‘t[o] require a unanimous decision
on any expungement request obviously
would give a single individual sitting on
a three-member panel the power to
prevent, for improper reason or no good
reason at all, a meritorious request that
a false or erroneous claim be removed
from a representative’s CRD record.’’
Other commenters supported
requiring a unanimous decision to
recommend expungement.232 For
example, PIABA stated that the
unanimity requirement would help
ensure that expungement was an
extraordinary remedy that is only
granted when it has no meaningful
investor protection or regulatory value.
The SEC Investor Advocate stated that
the requirement would provide greater
‘‘assurance that only meritless
complaints are expunged,’’ and
expressed hope ‘‘that this requirement
will encourage brokers to only seek
expungement when the underlying
customer dispute information is
meritless.’’ Cornell stated that the
‘‘unanimity requirement protects public
investors by ensuring that the threshold
for expungement is high,’’ and that,
‘‘given the history of abuse of the
expungement process,’’ would ‘‘help[ ]
to ensure that when expungement is
granted, the expungement is legitimate.’’
After considering the comments,
FINRA has determined to allow
arbitrators to recommend expungement
through a majority decision, consistent
with what is required for other
decisions in customer and industry
arbitrations.233 FINRA believes that
requiring a majority of arbitrators to
agree that expungement is appropriate
should be sufficient to help preserve in
the CRD system information that is
valuable to investors and regulators,
while allowing associated persons a
reasonable mechanism to remove
information that is inaccurate. FINRA
notes, however, that if the SEC approves
the proposed rule change, FINRA will
continue to monitor the expungement
process to determine if additional
changes are needed.
232 See Black, Cornell, Georgia State, Liebrader,
NASAA, PIABA, Public Citizen, The SEC Investor
Advocate and UNLV. In addition, Wellington stated
that if an expungement was endorsed unanimously,
the term ‘‘grant’’ should be retained, there should
be little or no cost to the requesting party, and the
associated person should not have to obtain a court
order directing the expungement.
233 See FINRA Rules 12904(a) and 13904(a).
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11. No Investor Protection or Regulatory
Value
In Notice 17–42, FINRA proposed to
require that a panel find that customer
dispute information has ‘‘no investor
protection or regulatory value’’ to
recommend expungement. Several
commenters opposed the
requirement.234 For example, Herskovits
stated that the standard was vague and
opened the possibility of inconsistent
rulings among different panels. FSI
stated that the proposal was ‘‘confusing
as it is difficult to imagine a scenario
where information that is false, clearly
erroneous, factually impossible or did
not involve the advisor, would have
regulatory or investor protection value.’’
SIFMA stated that the requirement was
redundant in light of the current high
standards in FINRA Rule 2080(b)(1),
may have the effect of discouraging
meritorious expungement claims, was
already incorporated into the Guidance
and would transform the traditional role
of arbitrators as fact-finders and require
them to make a policy determination in
each case. Keesal stated that the change
would unnecessarily complicate the
expungement process to the detriment
of associated persons with no
corresponding investor protection value.
Saretsky proposed that arbitrators
instead be required to find that the
customer dispute had no ‘‘reasonable’’
investor protection or regulatory value.
NASAA expressed a concern with the
proposal because it would allow
arbitrators, rather than regulators, to
make the finding. The SEC Investor
Advocate expressed the same concern,
and suggested that FINRA provide a
framework on how the standard should
be interpreted and applied to avoid
disparate interpretations and outcomes.
Schlein stated that arbitrators ‘‘should
receive supplemental training on the
proposed new standard,’’ and that
FINRA should also ‘‘offer training or
instructional materials to judges’’ who
will be required to confirm an
expungement award.
Other commenters supported the
requirement.235 For example, PIABA
suggested that arbitrators should be
required to make the finding because in
practice arbitration panels ‘‘often
believe that the Rule 2080 standards are
easily met’’ and ‘‘do not grasp the fact
that’’ a claim may not be factually
impossible or false even though a
customer has not met his or her burden
of proof for purposes of establishing
liability or rebutting an affirmative
234 See Baritz, FSI, Gocek, Herskovits, Janney,
Keesal, Saretsky, SIFMA and White.
235 See Cornell, Liebrader, PIABA, St. John’s and
UNLV.
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defense. St. John’s stated that the
proposed requirement would ‘‘help
strengthen investor protection by
improving confidence in the accuracy of
the CRD system and BrokerCheck.’’
Cornell stated that the requirement
would allow the panel to look beyond
the claim and at the associated person’s
record as a whole, including other
customer dispute information, which
would protect public investors.
Liebrader stated that ‘‘[t]oo many
legitimate claims disappear from public
view in the largely uncontested
expungement process.’’
After considering the comments,
FINRA has determined not to propose
that the panel must find ‘‘no investor
protection or regulatory value’’ to
recommend expungement. FINRA
agrees with some commenters that the
standard may, if codified into rule
language, create confusion among
arbitrators and the potential for
inconsistent application among different
arbitrators and panels.236 FINRA also
believes that the overall proposal,
coupled with the existing standards in
FINRA Rule 2080, would be sufficient to
help preserve in the CRD system
information that is valuable to investors
and regulators, while allowing
associated persons to remove
information that is inaccurate.
12. Panel Must Identify One of the
FINRA Rule 2080(b)(1) Grounds for
Expungement
In Notice 17–42, FINRA clarified in
proposed Rules 12805 and 13805 that
the FINRA Rule 2080 grounds for
expungement that the panel must
identify to recommend expungement are
the grounds stated in paragraph (b)(1) of
FINRA Rule 2080. In response to Notice
17–42, PIABA supported clarifying ‘‘that
an arbitration panel may not
recommend expungement on grounds
other than those set forth in Rule 2080.’’
Keesal, however, viewed FINRA’s
proposal as ‘‘remov[ing] the arbitrator’s
ability to grant expungement relief
based on judicial or arbitral findings
other than those listed in Rule
2080(b)(1).’’ 237
236 FINRA notes that in its Order approving
NASD Rule 2130 (now FINRA Rule 2080), which
describes the current findings that arbitrators must
make to recommend expungement, the SEC stated
that ‘‘it believes the proposal strikes the appropriate
balance between permitting members and
associated persons to remove information from the
CRD system that holds no regulatory value, while
at the same time preserving information on the CRD
system that is valuable to investors and regulators.’’
See Securities Exchange Act Release No. 48933
(December 16, 2003) 68 FR 74667, 74672 (December
24, 2003) (Order Approving File No. SR–NASD–
2002–168).
237 See also Baritz; compare SIFMA (stating that
‘‘FINRA already imposes high standards in order for
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FINRA notes that under current
FINRA Rule 12805, arbitrators are
required to base their expungement
recommendations on one of the three
grounds listed in FINRA Rule
2080(b)(1).238 Accordingly, the
proposed rule change clarifies in
proposed Rules 12805 and 13805 that
the grounds for expungement that the
panel must indicate in its award are the
grounds in FINRA Rule 2080(b)(1).239
13. Time Limits for Straight-In Requests
In Notice 17–42, FINRA proposed that
for customer arbitrations, associated
persons must file straight-in requests
within one-year from the date the
customer arbitration closed. For
customer complaints, FINRA proposed
that associated persons must file
straight-in requests within one-year
from the date that a member firm
initially reported the complaint to the
CRD system. For customer arbitrations
that close and customer complaints that
are reported prior to the effective date
of the proposed rule change, the
associated person would have six
months from the effective date of the
rule, if approved by the Commission, to
file the expungement request.
Some commenters opposed the
proposed time limitations as
unwarranted or too short.240 For
example, SIFMA stated that the oneyear time limitation is unnecessary
because the general six-year period to
file all claims also applies to
expungement requests. SIFMA also
stated that the one-year time limitation
is insufficient for firms to properly
investigate and respond to customer
complaints, and would create
inefficiency by requiring the filing of
requests to expunge customer
complaints that would then be stayed if
they evolved into an arbitration. SIFMA
also requested ‘‘further guidance on the
extended time period that will be
afforded registered representatives who
have eligible claims for expungement
arbitrators to recommend expungement,’’ and that
‘‘FINRA Rule 2080(b)(1) requires a finding either
that: (i) the claim or allegation is factually
impossible or clearly erroneous; (ii) the registered
person was not involved in the alleged sales
practice violation, forgery, theft, misappropriation
or conversion of funds, or (iii) the claim, allegation,
or information is false’’).
238 See Regulatory Notice 08–79 (December 2008)
(stating that ‘‘[t]he arbitration panel must indicate
which of the grounds for expungement under Rule
2130(b)(1)(A)–(C) serve as the basis for their
expungement order, and provide a brief written
explanation of the reasons for ordering
expungement’’).
239 See proposed Rules 12805(c)(8) and
13805(c)(8).
240 See AdvisorLaw, Barber, Baritz, Behr, Brookes,
FSI, Glenn, Grebenik, Herskovits, Higgenbotham,
JonesBell, Keesal, Leven, Saretsky, SIFMA, Smart,
Speicher, Stephens and Walter.
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that would become ineligible if the rule
proposals were implemented.’’ 241
JonesBell and Behr stated that an
associated person may be unaware that
a member firm ‘‘has reported a customer
complaint on his or her CRD.’’ 242 FSI
stated that associated persons should
have three years to file expungement
requests to provide them with time to
assess how the information will impact
their business, which may not be
immediately apparent. Keesal stated
that because customers may wait up to
six years to file an arbitration claim
under FINRA Rule 12206 after making
a customer complaint, the proposed
time limits would be unfair and would
increase the frequency of requests, as
the associated person would have to
make a second expungement request if
the customer complaint was later the
subject of an arbitration claim. Saretksy
stated that the time restriction was
unnecessary because arbitrators are
‘‘free to weigh the evidentiary value (if
any) of an associated person’s undue
delay.’’ Herskovits stated that FINRA’s
concern about document retention was
‘‘misplaced’’ because SEC and FINRA
rules ‘‘generally mandate the
preservation of most records for 3 to 6
years (and many firms preserve
documents for longer periods of time).’’
Grebenik expressed concerns with the
proposed time limits because there were
‘‘thousands of advisors who have
customer disputes and do not know
about the expungement process.’’
Other commenters supported the time
limits.243 For example, UNLV stated
that the proposed time limit would
ensure ‘‘that relevant evidence is
available and increases investors’ ability
to participate.’’ In response to other
commenters’ suggestion that brokers
may not be aware of a customer
complaint, Cornell stated that ‘‘public
investors should not be penalized for
the failure of firms to implement
streamlined notification and
recordkeeping procedures,’’ and that ‘‘it
is not too much to ask that the
associated person follow up as to
disposition by the firm.’’
PIABA ‘‘strongly support[ed] a
definite cut-off date for requests for
expungement,’’ and stated that a
customer is ‘‘far more likely to
participate in an expungement hearing
when it takes place in close proximity
241 See also AdvisorLaw (stating that providing
six months where the customer arbitration closes on
or prior to the effective date of the proposed rule
change was arbitrary and creates an unjustifiable
distinction between cases that close prior to the
rules and those that close after).
242 See supra note 48.
243 See Cornell, Georgia State, PIABA, Public
Citizen and Schlein.
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to the resolution of the underlying
arbitration proceeding.’’ PIABA also
stated that a more stringent time limit
would lead to higher quality evidence,
which becomes less reliable and
available with the passage of time.
PIABA stated that when the arbitration
results in an award, a shorter timeframe
of 90 days is preferable because
significant time will already have
passed from the filing of the customer’s
arbitration claim, and because 90 days
matches the deadline to file a motion to
vacate an arbitration award under the
Federal Arbitration Act. PIABA also
stated that, because member firms and
associated persons control the date that
information is reported in the CRD
system, the time limit for customer
complaints should run from the shorter
of the date the firm initially reported the
complaint in the CRD system or a month
after the associated person receives
notice of the complaint.
After considering the comments,
FINRA believes that adjustments to the
originally proposed time limitations are
warranted to provide sufficient time for
associated persons to determine
whether to seek expungement of
customer dispute information.
Accordingly, FINRA has revised the
proposal to provide for a two-year
period to file an expungement request
when a customer arbitration or civil
litigation that gives rise to customer
dispute information closes.244 The twoyear period would help ensure that the
expungement hearing is held close in
time to the customer arbitration or civil
litigation, when information regarding
the customer arbitration is available and
in a timeframe that would increase the
likelihood for the customer to
participate if he or she chooses to do so.
At the same time, it would allow the
associated person time to determine
whether to seek expungement.
For customer complaints where no
customer arbitration or civil litigation
gave rise to the customer dispute
information, the proposed rule change
would provide for six years from the
date that the customer complaint was
initially reported to the CRD system for
the associated person to file the
expungement request.245 Six years
would allow firms time to complete
investigations of customer complaints
and close them in the CRD system and
for the complaints to evolve, or not
evolve, into an arbitration. Thus, the
revised proposal would help avoid
unnecessary duplicative requests to
expunge customer complaints that
subsequently evolve into arbitrations or
244 See
245 See
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civil litigations, while providing
reasonable time limits to encourage
customer participation and help ensure
the availability of evidence. The
proposed six-year time limitation is also
consistent with FINRA’s general
eligibility rule, which provides that no
claim shall be eligible for submission to
arbitration under the Code where six
years have elapsed from the occurrence
or event giving rise to the claim.246
The proposed rule change makes
similar revisions to the time limits
described in Notice 17–42 to seek to
expunge customer dispute information
that arose prior to the effective date of
the proposed rule change. For customer
dispute information arising from
customer arbitrations or civil litigations
that closed on or prior to the effective
date of the proposed rule change, the
expungement request would be required
to be made within two years of the
effective date of the proposed rule
change.247 For customer complaints
initially reported to the CRD system on
or prior to the effective date of the
proposed rule change, where no
customer arbitration or civil litigation
gave rise to the customer dispute
information, the expungement request
would be required to be made within six
years of the effective date of the
proposed rule change.248
14. Effect of Withdrawal of
Expungement Request
In Notice 17–42, FINRA proposed that
if the associated person withdraws an
expungement request after the panel is
appointed in a straight-in request, the
case would be closed with prejudice,
unless the panel decides otherwise.
AdvisorLaw supported the proposal,
stating that it would ‘‘create safeguards,
and prevent an associated person from
simply withdrawing their case and
refiling in hopes of drawing a more
favorable pool of randomly selected
arbitrators.’’
Under the proposed rule change, for
expungement requests during customer
arbitrations and straight-in requests, if
the associated person withdraws or does
not pursue the expungement request (or
the party, with the written consent of
the unnamed person, withdraws or does
not pursue the request), the panel would
be required to deny the expungement
request with prejudice.249 These
requirements would foreclose the ability
of associated persons withdrawing
expungement requests to avoid having
246 See
supra note 14.
proposed Rule 13805(a)(2)(B)(i).
248 See proposed Rule 13805(a)(2)(B)(ii).
249 See proposed Rules 12805(a)(1)(D)(i),
12805(a)(2)(E)(i) and 13805(a)(4).
247 See
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their requests decided by the panel, and
then seeking to re-file the request and
receive a new list of arbitrators and a
potentially more favorable panel and
decision.
15. Associated Person’s Appearance
Required at the Expungement Hearing
In Notice 17–42, FINRA proposed that
an associated person seeking to have his
or her CRD record expunged would be
required to appear at the expungement
hearing either in person or by video
conference. Five commenters supported
the proposal, stating generally that this
would allow the arbitrators to better
assess the associated person’s demeanor
and credibility.250 UNLV also stated that
requiring videoconferencing would
carry minimal costs given its
widespread availability at FINRA’s
regional offices and other venues.
NASAA stated that the broker should be
required to appear in-person, ‘‘given the
extraordinary relief the broker is
seeking.’’ Georgia State also supported
requiring an associated person to appear
in person at the hearing, and stated that
appearance by video conference should
only ‘‘be permitted, if at all, in those
simplified cases where a hearing did not
take place.’’
Six commenters preferred to allow the
associated person to appear by
telephone.251 SIFMA, for example,
stated that there appeared to be no basis
for allowing customers, but not
associated persons, to appear by
telephone, and that the proposal would
‘‘greatly increase the cost of
expungement through attendant travel
costs and loss of productivity.’’ Three
commenters stated that the arbitrators
should decide the method of
appearance.252 White, for example,
stated that telephonic testimony ‘‘might
be acceptable in limited circumstances,’’
and suggested that ‘‘arbitrators can make
this determination and the Rule should
not limit their flexibility to do so.’’
After considering the comments, the
proposed rule change would allow the
panel to determine the method of
appearance by the associated person—
by telephone, in person or by video
conference.253 As the associated person
is requesting the permanent removal of
information from his or her CRD record,
FINRA believes the associated person
should personally participate in the
expungement hearing to respond to
questions from the panel and those
customers who choose to participate.
Black, Caruso, Cornell, PIABA and UNLV.
Baritz, Gocek, Grebenik, Keesal, SIFMA
and Tinklenberg.
252 See AdvisorLaw, Robbins and White.
253 See proposed Rules 12805(c)(2) and
13805(c)(2).
Rather than restrict the method of
appearance, the panel would have the
authority to decide which method of
appearance would be the most
appropriate for the particular case.254
FINRA believes that providing
flexibility as to the method of
appearance would encourage
appropriate fact-finding by the
arbitrators and generally strengthen the
process.
16. Customer Notification
In Notice 17–42, FINRA proposed that
when an expungement request is filed
separately from the customer
arbitration, FINRA would notify the
parties from the customer arbitration or
the customer who initiated the
complaint that is the subject of the
request about the expungement request.
PIABA supported the proposed
customer notification requirement.
Georgia State recommended ‘‘additional
notifications to the investor about the
expungement hearing.’’
The proposed rule change modifies
the proposal in Notice 17–42 to add an
additional notification to help ensure
that customers receive timely notice of
both the expungement request and the
expungement hearing. The associated
person would be required to serve all
customers whose customer arbitrations,
civil litigations and customer
complaints gave rise to customer
dispute information that is a subject of
the expungement request with notice of
the request by serving on the customers
a copy of the statement of claim
requesting expungement before the first
scheduled hearing session is held.255
The Director would then notify the
customers of the time, date and place of
the expungement hearing using the
customers’ current address provided by
the party seeking expungement.256
17. Customer Participation During the
Expungement Hearing
In Notice 17–42, FINRA proposed
that, consistent with the Guidance, all
customers in the customer arbitration or
who filed a customer complaint would
be entitled to appear at the
expungement hearing. At the customer’s
option, the customer could appear by
telephone.
In response to Notice 17–42, PIABA
and The SEC Investor Advocate stated
that FINRA should codify all of the
customer rights provided in the
Guidance, including, for example,
allowing the customer or their counsel
250 See
251 See
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254 See
supra note 253.
proposed Rule 13805(b)(1)(A); see also
supra note 134.
256 See proposed Rule 13805(b)(2); see also supra
note 137.
255 See
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to introduce documents and other
evidence and to cross-examine the
broker or other witnesses called by the
broker seeking expungement.257
FINRA agrees that the customer rights
contained in the Guidance should be
codified, as reflected in the proposed
rule change.258 In addition to
incorporating the customer rights
contained in the Guidance, the
proposed rule change also clarifies that
the customer may be represented and
states that the customer may appear at
the expungement hearing by telephone,
in person, or by video conference. In
addition, if a customer testifies, the
associated person or other person
requesting expungement would be
allowed to cross-examine the customer.
If the customer introduces any evidence
at the expungement hearing, the
associated person or party requesting
expungement could object to the
introduction of the evidence, and the
panel would decide any objections. The
proposed rule change would allow and
encourage customers to participate fully
in the expungement hearing, while
providing the associated person with a
reasonable opportunity to rebut
evidence introduced by the customer.259
18. State Notification
In response to Notice 17–42, NASAA
requested ‘‘earlier notices to state
regulators of an expungement request to
better facilitate regulator involvement
where appropriate.’’ 260 The proposed
rule change provides that FINRA would
notify state securities regulators, in the
manner determined by FINRA, of the
associated person’s expungement
request within 30 days after receiving a
complete request for expungement, so
that the states are timely notified of the
request.261
19. Unnamed Persons
In Notice 17–42, FINRA proposed to
codify the ability of a party in a
customer arbitration to request
expungement on behalf of an unnamed
person. AdvisorLaw stated that it
opposed the practice and suggested that
FINRA prohibit it entirely as there
257 See
also St. John’s.
proposed Rules 12805(c) and 13805(c).
259 In response to the Notice 17–42, White stated
that if the customer chooses to object to the
expungement request, ‘‘it would be helpful if it was
mandated that the customer participate in the
hearing or file a substantive statement or brief
opposing expungement.’’ Schlein stated that FINRA
should consider requiring the associated person to
‘‘bear the cost of the customer’s attendance if the
customer wishes to participate in person.’’ FINRA
believes that these requirements would be unduly
burdensome and, therefore, has determined not to
propose them as requirements.
260 See also The SEC Investor Advocate.
261 See proposed Rules 12805(b) and 13805(b)(3).
258 See
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would be an ‘‘inherent conflict’’ of
interest for the firm’s counsel because
the interest of the member (who is the
counsel’s client) and the associated
person rarely align. AdvisorLaw also
suggested that the associated person’s
consent may be compromised ‘‘in the
likely scenario where the member firm
is providing financial assistance for the
legal representation, as the associated
person may agree under financial
duress.’’ NASAA supported codifying
the practice, but noted that it would
‘‘require cooperation between firms and
their associated persons’’ and that
FINRA would have to develop ‘‘robust,
mandated notification procedures.’’ 262
FINRA notes that under the proposed
rule change, filing an on-behalf-of
request would be permissive, not
mandatory. In addition, FINRA would
require the party and the unnamed
person to sign a form consenting to the
on-behalf-of request to help ensure that
the unnamed person is fully aware of
the request and that the firm is agreeing
to represent the unnamed person for the
purpose of requesting expungement
during the customer arbitration,
regardless of how the arbitration
closes.263
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20. No Interventions by Associated
Persons To Request Expungement
In Notice 17–42, FINRA proposed to
foreclose the option of an unnamed
person to intervene in a customer
arbitration to request expungement.
Keesal opposed this proposal, stating
that intervention ‘‘often can be
economical, given that the evidence on
the merits (or lack thereof) of the
customer’s complaint will be presented
at the evidentiary hearing and that same
evidence will provide the basis for
expungement relief.’’ 264
FINRA believes that where no party to
the arbitration has filed a claim against
the associated person or requested
expungement on his or her behalf, the
associated person’s conduct is less
likely to be addressed fully by the
parties during the customer arbitration.
In those circumstances, FINRA believes
that the associated person should not be
able to intervene in the customer
arbitration, and that any expungement
request should be decided separately by
the Special Arbitrator Roster.265
262 See NASAA (noting support for this change
along with the proposal in the Notice 17–42 that
would prevent an unnamed associated from filing
an arbitration claim seeking expungement against
an investor).
263 See proposed Rules 12805(a)(2)(C)(ii) and
12805(a)(2)(D).
264 See also Behr and JonesBell.
265 See proposed Rule 12805(a)(1)(E)(iii); see also
supra Item II.A.1.(II)A.3, ‘‘No Intervening in
Customer Arbitrations to Request Expungement.’’
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21. Application of Expungement
Framework to Customer Complaints
In Notice 17–42, FINRA proposed to
allow an associated person to file an
arbitration against a member firm for the
sole purpose of seeking expungement of
a customer complaint and have the
request decided by the Special
Arbitrator Roster. In response to Notice
17–42, NASAA stated that it objected to
‘‘expanding the scope of Rule 2080 to
apply to all information related to [nonarbitrated] customer complaints.’’
NASAA stated that today, the
expungement process is used to
expunge customer complaints that are
not the subject of arbitration, but
believed that this practice was ‘‘beyond
the scope originally intended with the
rules’’ and that codification would
‘‘further embed a flawed process that
does not afford regulators the ability to
preserve information already considered
to have regulatory value and provide
investor protection.’’ The SEC Investor
Advocate also indicated that it did not
believe that ‘‘now is the time to expand
the Rule 2080 expungement process to
claims that do not result in arbitration,’’
and that it would ‘‘prefer to see the
results of the new process before
introducing an entirely new class of
complaints to the mix.’’
FINRA notes that customer
complaints have always been within the
contemplated scope of FINRA Rule
2080. In proposing and adopting
predecessor NASD Rule 2130, and in
proposing to adopt FINRA Rule 2080
without material change, FINRA defined
‘‘customer dispute information’’ as
including ‘‘customer complaints,
arbitration claims, and court filings
made by customers, and the arbitration
awards or court judgments that may
result from those claims or filings.’’ 266
The proposed amendments would
continue to allow associated persons to
file a claim in arbitration against a
member firm for the sole purpose of
seeking expungement of a customer
complaint that is reported in the CRD
system.
22. Other General Comments in
Response to Notice 17–42
A. Personal Experiences With the
Expungement Process
Some commenters opposed the
proposal as set forth in Notice 17–42
266 See Notice to Members 04–16 (March 2004);
Securities Exchange Act Release No. 47435 (March
4, 2003), 68 FR 11435 (March 10, 2003) (Notice of
Filing and Amendment No. 1 of File No. SR–
NASD–2002–168); Securities Exchange Act Release
No. 59771 (April 15, 2009), 74 FR 18411 (April 22,
2009) (Notice of Filing and Amendment No. 1 of
File No. SR–FINRA–2009–016).
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62173
because of their experiences with what
they considered to be meritless
customer arbitration claims.267 In
addition, a number of commenters
described their personal experiences
with the customer complaint and
expungement process or generally
criticized the current process and the
proposed rule change as unfair.268
FINRA acknowledges and appreciates
the commenters’ concerns and has
considered them in connection with the
proposed rule change as a whole.
B. General Perspectives on the Proposed
Rule Change
Some commenters also offered more
general perspectives on the rule
proposal as set forth in Notice 17–42.
The SEC Investor Advocate, while
generally supporting the proposed rule
change, expressed a concern that the
proposed amendments may cause
brokers to seek to avoid the FINRA Rule
2080 process entirely, and instead
request expungement directly in a court
of competent jurisdiction. FINRA notes
that today, a broker can seek
expungement by going through the
FINRA arbitration process or by going
directly to court.269
SIFMA stated that FINRA already has
in place a robust set of rules and
expanded guidance to safeguard the
expungement process, and that there
did not appear to be any empirical
justification for the additional
regulations contained in the proposal,
such as that expungements are too
numerous or are being improperly
granted.
PIABA stated that FINRA should only
promulgate rules that facilitate removal
of customer dispute information from
the CRD system in the most
extraordinary of circumstances. NASAA
supported the proposal as an ‘‘important
first step’’ that ‘‘add[ed] beneficial
requirements and limitations related to
the procedure of expungement.’’
FINRA appreciates the commenters’
differing perspectives. FINRA’s review
suggests that the percentage of
expungement requests that are
267 See Anzaldua, Barber, Braschi, Brookes,
Burrill, Christ, Decker, Di Silvio, Gamblin, Glenn,
Harmon, Harris, Higgenbotham, Isola, Joyce, Leven,
Lindsey, Ram, Rosser, Scrydloff, Skafco, Slaughter,
Stephens, Stewart, Tinklenberg, Walter, Weinerf
and Zanolli.
268 See e.g., Higgenbotham (describing CRD
disclosures ‘‘related to funds offered by my
employer [that] crashed during the 2007–2008
Financial Crisis’’); see also AdvisorLaw (providing
a hyperlink to an online petition that requested
signatures to ‘‘support a balanced, cost and time
effective, expungement process,’’ and collecting
associated comments).
269 See FINRA Rule 2080; see also supra note 12
(describing the requirement to name FINRA as a
party when brokers seek expungement in court).
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recommended is higher when the
arbitrator or panel receives information
only from the associated person or other
party requesting expungement.270
FINRA believes that the expungement
process that would be established by the
proposed rule change would help
ensure that expungement is
recommended in limited circumstances,
while providing associated persons with
a reasonable framework to seek
expungement of information on their
CRD records by establishing one or more
of the grounds set forth in FINRA Rule
2080(b)(1).
C. Alternatives to the CRD Disclosure
and Expungement Framework
Several commenters suggested
alternatives to the current CRD
disclosure and expungement
framework.271 For example, Mahoney
stated that where an arbitration panel
renders an award denying a customer’s
claims against an associated person,
‘‘the associated person should
automatically have their CRD record
expunged of all references to the
complaint.’’ Mahoney also stated that
FINRA should not subject associated
persons who are not named in a
customer complaint, but were
determined by member firms to have
been involved in the sales practice
violation(s), to disclosure and
expungement standards that ‘‘create an
unprecedented rebuttable presumption
of liability.’’ 272 In contrast, St. John’s
suggested that associated persons be
prohibited from seeking expungement if
there has been a finding of liability in
the arbitration.
PIABA stated that although it
supported the proposed rule change,
expungement requests would be best
handled separate from the arbitration
and determined by FINRA itself rather
than arbitrators. NASAA proposed
further reform to the expungement
process built around several principles
including, for example, increased
regulatory participation that allows for a
regulatory determination regarding the
merits of the expungement request.
FINRA appreciates the commenters’
suggestions. As indicated by the
proposed rule change, FINRA believes
that revising the current expungement
process as set forth in the proposed rule
change, particularly the establishment
of a panel of arbitrators randomly
selected from the Special Arbitrator
Roster to consider and decide straight270 See
supra Item II.B.2., ‘‘Economic Baseline.’’
Barber, Baumgardner, Burrill, Butt,
Chepucavage, Commonwealth, Harmon, Harris,
Mahoney, Penzell, PIABA, Stewart, Tinklenberg
and Wellington.
272 See also FSI.
271 See
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in requests, would best help achieve the
goal that expungement should be
recommended in limited circumstances.
However, FINRA welcomes continued
engagement to discuss further ways to
enhance the expungement process.
D. Other Comments
In response to Notice 17–42, Public
Citizen stated that the explanation of
expungement decisions that arbitrators
write should be made public to ensure
transparency. FINRA notes that
arbitrators are required to provide a
brief written explanation of the reasons
for recommending expungement in the
arbitration award.273 The proposed rule
change would retain this requirement,
but would remove the word ‘‘brief’’ to
indicate to the arbitrators that they must
provide enough detail in the award to
explain their rationale for
recommending expungement.274 As the
Guidance suggests, the explanation
must be complete and not solely a
recitation of one of the FINRA Rule
2080 grounds or language provided in
the expungement request.275
In addition, FINRA makes arbitration
awards publicly available in the FINRA
Arbitration Awards Online database
(which provides arbitration awards
rendered in FINRA’s arbitration forum
as well as other forums).276 To provide
information to the public, BrokerCheck
links directly to the FINRA Arbitration
Awards Online database. When a
broker’s BrokerCheck record includes a
reportable arbitration award, the
BrokerCheck record provides a
hyperlink directly to the relevant
document.
PIABA stated that removal of
customer dispute information from the
CRD system diminishes the ability of
reputation to police business
misconduct because of ‘‘FINRA’s
embrace of widespread pre-dispute
arbitration agreements,’’ and because
records from FINRA proceedings are not
available to the public on the same
terms as public court proceedings. As
discussed above, the proposed rule
change is intended to help preserve in
CRD information that is valuable to
investors and regulators, while allowing
associated persons a reasonable
mechanism to remove information that
is inaccurate.
Keesal suggested that orders from
other respected arbitration forums, such
as the American Arbitration Association
(‘‘AAA’’), should be afforded the same
weight as arbitral findings from
arbitrators in FINRA-administered
arbitration, provided that (1) the
arbitrators make written, factual
findings as the basis for expungement
under FINRA Rule 2080 and (2) the
requirements of FINRA Rule 12805 are
satisfied. FINRA appreciates the
commenter’s suggestion and would
consider how to treat arbitration awards
recommending expungement in
accordance with the proposed rule
change from other recognized
arbitration forums, such as AAA or
JAMS, if the proposed rule change is
approved by the Commission.
In addition, Keesal requested that
FINRA provide guidance to associated
persons and registration personnel
regarding the meaning and effect of an
expunged claim in the context of
licensing and registration
questionnaires. Although the impact on
licensing and registration questionnaires
is outside the scope of the proposed rule
change, FINRA will consider whether
additional guidance is appropriate.
III. Date of Effectiveness of the
Proposed Rule Change and Timing for
Commission Action
Within 45 days of the date of
publication of this notice in the Federal
Register or within such longer period (i)
as the Commission may designate up to
90 days of such date if it finds such
longer period to be appropriate and
publishes its reasons for so finding or
(ii) as to which the self-regulatory
organization consents, the Commission
will:
(A) By order approve or disapprove
such proposed rule change, or
(B) institute proceedings to determine
whether the proposed rule change
should be disapproved.
IV. Solicitation of Comments
273 See
FINRA Rule 12805.
274 See proposed Rules 12805(c)(8) and
13805(c)(8).
275 See supra note 3.
276 Arbitration Awards Online is available at
https://www.finra.org/arbitration-and-mediation/
arbitration-awards. This database enables users to
perform Web-based searches for FINRA and
historical NASD arbitration awards. Also available
through the database are historical awards for the
New York Stock Exchange, the American Stock
Exchange, the Philadelphia Stock Exchange, the
Chicago Board Options Exchange, the Pacific
Exchange/ARCA and the Municipal Securities
Rulemaking Board.
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Interested persons are invited to
submit written data, views and
arguments concerning the foregoing,
including whether the proposed rule
change is consistent with the Act.
Comments may be submitted by any of
the following methods:
Electronic Comments
• Use the Commission’s internet
comment form (https://www.sec.gov/
rules/sro.shtml); or
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• Send an email to rule-comments@
sec.gov. Please include File Number SR–
FINRA–2020–030 on the subject line.
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Paper Comments
• Send paper comments in triplicate
to Secretary, Securities and Exchange
Commission, 100 F Street NE,
Washington, DC 20549–1090.
All submissions should refer to File
Number SR–FINRA–2020–030. This file
number should be included on the
subject line if email is used. To help the
Commission process and review your
comments more efficiently, please use
only one method. The Commission will
post all comments on the Commission’s
internet website (https://www.sec.gov/
rules/sro.shtml). Copies of the
submission, all subsequent
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21:42 Sep 30, 2020
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amendments, all written statements
with respect to the proposed rule
change that are filed with the
Commission, and all written
communications relating to the
proposed rule change between the
Commission and any person, other than
those that may be withheld from the
public in accordance with the
provisions of 5 U.S.C. 552, will be
available for website viewing and
printing in the Commission’s Public
Reference Room, 100 F Street NE,
Washington, DC 20549, on official
business days between the hours of 10
a.m. and 3 p.m. Copies of such filing
also will be available for inspection and
copying at the principal office of
FINRA. All comments received will be
posted without change. Persons
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62175
submitting comments are cautioned that
we do not redact or edit personal
identifying information from comment
submissions. You should submit only
information that you wish to make
available publicly. All submissions
should refer to File Number SR–FINRA–
2020–030 and should be submitted on
or before October 22, 2020.
For the Commission, by the Division of
Trading and Markets, pursuant to delegated
authority.277
J. Matthew DeLesDernier,
Assistant Secretary.
[FR Doc. 2020–21660 Filed 9–30–20; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 8011–01–P
277 17
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Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 85, Number 191 (Thursday, October 1, 2020)]
[Notices]
[Pages 62142-62175]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2020-21660]
[[Page 62141]]
Vol. 85
Thursday,
No. 191
October 1, 2020
Part V
Securities and Exchange Commission
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Self-Regulatory Organizations; Financial Industry Regulatory Authority,
Inc.; Notice of Filing of a Proposed Rule Change To Amend the Codes of
Arbitration Procedure Relating to Requests To Expunge Customer Dispute
Information, Including Creating a Special Arbitrator Roster To Decide
Certain Expungement Requests; Notice
Federal Register / Vol. 85 , No. 191 / Thursday, October 1, 2020 /
Notices
[[Page 62142]]
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SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION
[Release No. 34-90000; File No. SR-FINRA-2020-030]
Self-Regulatory Organizations; Financial Industry Regulatory
Authority, Inc.; Notice of Filing of a Proposed Rule Change To Amend
the Codes of Arbitration Procedure Relating to Requests To Expunge
Customer Dispute Information, Including Creating a Special Arbitrator
Roster To Decide Certain Expungement Requests
September 25, 2020.
Pursuant to Section 19(b)(1) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934
(``Act'') \1\ and Rule 19b-4 thereunder,\2\ notice is hereby given that
on September 22, 2020, the Financial Industry Regulatory Authority,
Inc. (``FINRA'') filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission
(``SEC'' or ``Commission'') the proposed rule change as described in
Items I, II, and III below, which Items have been prepared by FINRA.
The Commission is publishing this notice to solicit comments on the
proposed rule change from interested persons.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ 15 U.S.C. 78s(b)(1).
\2\ 17 CFR 240.19b-4.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
I. Self-Regulatory Organization's Statement of the Terms of Substance
of the Proposed Rule Change
FINRA is proposing to amend the Code of Arbitration Procedure for
Customer Disputes (``Customer Code'') and the Code of Arbitration
Procedure for Industry Disputes (``Industry Code'') (together,
``Codes'') to modify the current process relating to the expungement of
customer dispute information.
Specifically, the proposed rule change would amend the Codes to:
(1) Impose requirements on expungement requests (a) filed during an
investment-related, customer initiated arbitration (``customer
arbitration'') by an associated person, or by a party to the customer
arbitration on-behalf-of an associated person (``on-behalf-of
request''), or (b) filed by an associated person separate from a
customer arbitration (``straight-in request''); (2) establish a roster
of arbitrators with enhanced training and experience from which a
three-person panel would be randomly selected to decide straight-in
requests; (3) establish procedural requirements for expungement
hearings; and (4) codify and update the best practices of the Notice to
Arbitrators and Parties on Expanded Expungement Guidance (``Guidance'')
that arbitrators and parties must follow.\3\ In addition, the proposed
rule change would amend the Customer Code to specify procedures for
requesting expungement of customer dispute information arising from
simplified arbitrations. The proposed rule change would also amend the
Codes to establish requirements for notifying state securities
regulators and customers of expungement requests.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\3\ See Guidance, available at https://www.finra.org/arbitration-and-mediation/notice-arbitrators-and-parties-expanded-expungement-guidance.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The text of the proposed rule change is available on FINRA's
website at https://www.finra.org, at the principal office of FINRA and
at the Commission's Public Reference Room.
II. Self-Regulatory Organization's Statement of the Purpose of, and
Statutory Basis for, the Proposed Rule Change
In its filing with the Commission, FINRA included statements
concerning the purpose of and basis for the proposed rule change and
discussed any comments it received on the proposed rule change. The
text of these statements may be examined at the places specified in
Item IV below. FINRA has prepared summaries, set forth in sections A,
B, and C below, of the most significant aspects of such statements.
A. Self-Regulatory Organization's Statement of the Purpose of, and
Statutory Basis for, the Proposed Rule Change
1. Purpose
(I) Background and Discussion
A. Customer Dispute Information in the Central Registration Depository
Information regarding customer disputes involving associated
persons is maintained in the Central Registration Depository
(``CRD[supreg]''), the central licensing and registration system used
by the U.S. securities industry and its regulators.\4\ FINRA operates
the CRD system pursuant to policies developed jointly with NASAA. FINRA
works with the SEC, NASAA and other members of the regulatory community
to ensure that information submitted and maintained in the CRD system
is accurate and complete.
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\4\ The concept for the CRD system was developed by FINRA
jointly with the North American Securities Administrators
Association (``NASAA''). The CRD system fulfills FINRA's statutory
obligation to establish and maintain a system to collect and retain
registration information. NASAA and state regulators play a critical
role in the ongoing development and implementation of the CRD
system.
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In general, the information in the CRD system is submitted by
registered securities firms, brokers and regulatory authorities in
response to questions on the uniform registration forms.\5\ These forms
are used to collect registration information, which includes, among
other things, administrative, regulatory, criminal history, financial
and other information about brokers, such as customer complaints,
arbitration claims and court filings made by customers (i.e.,
``customer dispute information''). FINRA, state and other regulators
use this information in connection with their licensing and regulatory
activities, and member firms use this information to help them make
informed employment decisions.
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\5\ The uniform registration forms are Form BD (Uniform
Application for Broker-Dealer Registration), Form BDW (Uniform
Request for Broker-Dealer Withdrawal), Form BR (Uniform Branch
Office Registration Form), Form U4 (Uniform Application for
Securities Industry Registration or Transfer), Form U5 (Uniform
Termination Notice for Securities Industry Registration) and Form U6
(Uniform Disciplinary Action Reporting Form).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Pursuant to rules approved by the SEC, FINRA makes specific CRD
information publicly available through BrokerCheck[supreg].\6\
BrokerCheck is part of FINRA's ongoing effort to help investors make
informed choices about the brokers and broker-dealer firms with which
they may conduct business. BrokerCheck maintains information on the
approximately 3,600 registered broker-dealer firms and 624,000
registered brokers. BrokerCheck also provides the public with access to
information about formerly registered broker-dealer firms and
brokers.\7\ In 2019 alone, BrokerCheck helped users conduct more than
40 million searches of firms and brokers.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\6\ Section 15A of the Exchange Act requires FINRA to provide
registration information to the public. BrokerCheck is one of the
tools through which FINRA disseminates this information to the
public. There is a limited amount of information in the CRD system
that FINRA does not display through BrokerCheck, including personal
or confidential information. A detailed description of the
information made available through BrokerCheck is available at
https://www.finra.org/investors/about-brokercheck.
\7\ Formerly registered brokers, although no longer in the
securities industry in a registered capacity, may work in other
investment-related industries or may seek to attain other positions
of trust with potential investors. BrokerCheck provides information
on more than 17,000 formerly registered broker-dealer firms and
nearly 567,000 formerly registered brokers. Broker records are
available in BrokerCheck for 10 years after a broker leaves the
industry, and brokers who are the subject of disciplinary actions
and certain other events remain on BrokerCheck permanently.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The regulatory framework governing the CRD system and BrokerCheck
has long contemplated the possibility of expunging certain customer
dispute
[[Page 62143]]
information from these systems in limited circumstances, such as where
the allegations made about the broker are factually impossible or
clearly erroneous. The expungement framework seeks to balance the
competing interests of providing regulators broad access to information
about customer disputes to fulfill their regulatory obligations,
providing a fair process that recognizes a broker's interest in
protecting their reputation and ensuring investors have access to
accurate information about brokers.
B. FINRA Rules 2080, 12805 and 13805 Governing Expungement of Customer
Dispute Information
A broker can seek expungement of customer dispute information by
obtaining a court expungement order (1) by going through the FINRA
arbitration process (and then obtaining a court order confirming an
arbitration award containing expungement) or (2) by going directly to
court (without first going to arbitration).
FINRA rules require arbitrators to perform fact-finding before
recommending expungement of customer dispute information and to provide
information about the basis for the expungement. Specifically, FINRA
Rules 12805 and 13805 require arbitrators to hold a recorded hearing
regarding the appropriateness of expungement of customer dispute
information and to review settlement documents, the amount of payments
made to any party and any other terms and conditions of the
settlement.\8\
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\8\ In almost every proceeding, all or a majority of the
arbitrators considering an expungement request are public
arbitrators. Among other requirements, public arbitrators have never
been employed by the securities industry; do not devote 20 percent
or more of their professional work to the securities industry or to
parties in disputes concerning investment accounts or transactions
or employment relationships within the financial industry; and do
not have immediate family members or co-workers who do so. See FINRA
Rule 12100(aa).
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In addition, these rules require arbitrators to indicate whether
they have awarded expungement because: (1) The claim, allegation or
information is factually impossible or clearly erroneous; (2) the
associated person was not involved in the alleged investment-related
sales practice violation, forgery, theft, misappropriation or
conversion of funds; or (3) the claim, allegation or information is
false.\9\ The arbitrators are further required to provide a brief
written explanation of the reasons for recommending expungement.\10\
These requirements are supplemented with extensive guidance and
training, including the Guidance, first published in 2013 and expanded
further periodically thereafter.\11\ The Guidance provides arbitrators
with best practices and recommendations to follow, in addition to the
requirements of FINRA Rules 12805 and 13805, when deciding expungement
requests.
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\9\ See FINRA Rules 2080, 12805 and 13805.
\10\ Although FINRA Rules 12805 and 13805 state that the panel
may ``grant'' expungement of customer dispute information under
FINRA Rule 2080, the panel's decision regarding an expungement
request is not the final step in the process. A person seeking
expungement must obtain a court order confirming an arbitration
award for FINRA to expunge the customer dispute information from the
CRD system. Accordingly, FINRA believes the word ``recommend'' more
accurately describes the panel's role in the expungement process. It
has been FINRA's longstanding practice to state in expungement
awards that the arbitrators ``recommend,'' rather than ``grant,''
expungement. See also infra note 132, and accompanying text (stating
that the proposed amendments to FINRA Rules 12805(c) and 13805(c)
would also provide that the panel would ``recommend'' rather than
``grant'' expungement).
\11\ See supra note 3.
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Regardless of whether expungement of customer dispute information
is sought directly through a court or in arbitration, FINRA Rule 2080,
which was developed in close consultation with representatives of NASAA
and state regulators, requires a broker-dealer firm or broker seeking
expungement to obtain an order of a court of competent jurisdiction
directing such expungement or confirming an award containing
expungement. FINRA will expunge customer dispute information only after
the court orders it to execute the expungement.\12\
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\12\ FINRA Rule 2080 also requires that firms and brokers
seeking a court order or confirmation of the arbitration award
containing expungement name FINRA as a party, and provides that
FINRA will challenge the request in court in appropriate
circumstances. FINRA may, however, waive the requirement to name it
as a party if a firm or broker requests a waiver and FINRA
determines that the award containing expungement is based on
affirmative judicial or arbitral findings that: (1) The claim,
allegation or information is factually impossible or clearly
erroneous; (2) the associated person was not involved in the alleged
investment-related sales practice violation, forgery, theft,
misappropriation or conversion of funds; or (3) the claim,
allegation, or information is false. In addition, FINRA has sole
discretion ``under extraordinary circumstances'' to waive the
requirement that it be named in a court proceeding if it determines
that the request for expungement and accompanying award are
meritorious and expungement would not have a material adverse effect
on investor protection, the integrity of the CRD system, or
regulatory requirements. See FINRA Rule 2080(b).
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C. Concerns Regarding Expungement
Some stakeholders of the forum have raised concerns about
expungement hearings held after the parties settle the customer
arbitration that gave rise to the customer dispute information.\13\ In
many of these instances, the panel from the customer arbitration has
not heard the full merits of that case and, therefore, may not have any
special insights in determining whether to recommend a request for
expungement of customer dispute information. Further, customers and
their representatives typically do not participate in an expungement
hearing after the customer arbitration settles, especially if the
expungement hearing occurs a number of years later.\14\ In addition, a
broker may file a straight-in request against a member firm for the
sole purpose of requesting expungement.\15\ In most of these straight-
in requests, the customer
[[Page 62144]]
dispute information arises from a customer arbitration or customer
complaint that was disclosed on the broker's CRD record a number of
years prior to the request.\16\ Thus, during these expungement
hearings, the panel may receive information only from the associated
person requesting expungement.
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\13\ In its Final Report and Recommendations, the FINRA Dispute
Resolution Task Force (``Task Force'') included a recommendation to
create a special arbitration panel consisting of specially trained
arbitrators to decide expungement requests in settled cases and in
cases when a claimant did not name the associated person as a
respondent in the case. See https://www.finra.org/sites/default/files/Final-DR-task-force-report.pdf; see also letter from Barbara
Black, Professor of Law, University of Cincinnati College of Law
(Retired), to Marcia Asquith, Office of the Corporate Secretary,
FINRA, dated February 5, 2018 (``Black'') (discussing the Task
Force's recommendation) and letter from Joseph Borg, President,
NASAA, to Marcia Asquith, Office of the Corporate Secretary, FINRA,
dated February 5, 2018 (``NASAA'') (commenting that post-settlement
expungement hearings often consist of one-sided presentations of the
facts). These and other letters responding to Regulatory Notice 17-
42 (December 2017) (``Notice 17-42'') are discussed in Item II.C.
below.
\14\ The Codes provide that no claim shall be eligible for
submission to arbitration under the Codes where six years have
elapsed from the occurrence or event giving rise to the claim. The
panel resolves any questions regarding the eligibility of a claim
under this rule. See FINRA Rules 12206(a) and 13206(a) (Time
Limitation on Submission of Claims). This six-year eligibility rule
applies to all arbitration claims, including those requesting
expungement. Thus, if an associated person requests expungement of a
CRD disclosure where six years have elapsed since the customer
complaint, arbitration or civil litigation was initially reported,
the arbitrator or panel should consider whether the claim is
eligible for arbitration.
In addition, FINRA Rules 12409 and 13413 (Jurisdiction of Panel
and Authority to Interpret the Code) provide that the panel has the
authority to interpret and determine the applicability of all
provisions under the Codes. Such interpretations are final and
binding upon the parties. Together, the rules grant arbitrators the
authority to decide whether a claim is eligible for arbitration
under the Codes. See Howsam v. Dean Witter Reynolds, 537 U.S. 79,
85-86 (2002) (finding that an arbitrator properly decides issues of
eligibility).
Arbitrators should ensure that an expungement claim is eligible
under the Codes and arbitrators may decide the eligibility issue on
their own, rather than only in response to a party's motion. See
Horst v. FINRA, No. A-18-777960-C (Dist. Ct. Nevada Oct. 25, 2018)
(Order Denying Motion to Vacate Arbitration Award) (ruling that an
arbitrator may raise sua sponte the eligibility issue, not only when
a party to the arbitration raises it in a motion).
\15\ Currently, on rare occasions, straight-in requests are
filed against a customer. As discussed below, the proposed
amendments would prohibit these filings. See infra Item
II.A.1.(II)A.2., ``No Straight-in Requests Against Customers.''
\16\ Several questions on Forms U4 and U5 require associated
persons to disclose certain investment-related, consumer-initiated
(i) complaints and (ii) arbitrations and civil litigations, alleging
sales practice violations. See Form U4, Question 14I, available at
https://www.finra.org/sites/default/files/form-u4.pdf and Form U5,
Question 7E, available at https://www.finra.org/sites/default/files/form-u5.pdf. These disclosures become part of the associated
person's CRD record and are made available on BrokerCheck.
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Further, FINRA is concerned that an increasing number of straight-
in requests are being heard by a single arbitrator instead of a three-
person panel.\17\ FINRA believes that most expungement requests should
be decided by a three-person panel. Expungement requests may be complex
to resolve, particularly straight-in requests where customers typically
do not participate in the expungement hearing. Thus, having three
arbitrators available to ask questions, request evidence and to serve
generally as fact-finders in the absence of customer input would help
ensure that a complete factual record is created to support the
arbitrators' decision in such expungement hearings.
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\17\ An expungement request is a non-monetary or not specified
claim. The Codes require that such claims are heard by a panel of
three arbitrators, unless the parties agree in writing to one
arbitrator. In addition, if a party requesting expungement adds a
small monetary claim (of less than $100,000) to the expungement
request, the Codes require that such claims are heard by one
arbitrator. See FINRA Rules 12401 and 13401. FINRA has amended the
Codes to apply minimum fees to expungement requests, whether the
request is made as part of the customer arbitration or the
associated person files an expungement request in a separate
arbitration. The amendments also apply a minimum process fee and
member surcharge to straight-in requests, as well as a minimum
hearing session fee to expungement-only hearings. See Securities
Exchange Act Release No. 88945 (May 26, 2020), 85 FR 33212 (June 1,
2020) (Order Approving File No. SR-FINRA-2020-005). See also
Regulatory Notice 20-25 (July 2020) (announcing a September 14, 2020
effective date) at https://www.finra.org/rules-guidance/notices/20-25.
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In addition, FINRA is concerned that some associated persons are
making second requests to expunge the same customer dispute information
that they previously requested be expunged by a court or another
arbitration panel. For example, an associated person may have a CRD
disclosure that resulted from a customer's arbitration claim, but
because the associated person is not named as a party to the customer
arbitration (``unnamed person''),\18\ the associated person is not able
to request expungement in the customer arbitration.\19\ When a firm
asks, on-behalf-of the unnamed person, that the arbitrators recommend
expungement, the unnamed person, as a non-party in the customer
arbitration, may subsequently argue that he or she did not receive
adequate notice of the expungement request or an opportunity to
participate in the earlier proceeding. The unnamed person may then file
a new claim to expunge the same disclosure that the firm requested on
the unnamed person's behalf, despite the fact that the panel denied the
expungement request in the prior matter.
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\18\ In 2009, the SEC approved amendments to Forms U4 and U5 to
require, among other things, the reporting of allegations of sales
practice violations made against unnamed persons. See Securities
Exchange Act Release No. 59916 (May 13, 2009), 74 FR 23750 (May 20,
2009) (Order Approving File No. SR-FINRA-2009-008). Specifically,
Forms U4 and U5 were amended to add questions to elicit whether the
applicant or registered person, though not named as a respondent or
defendant in a customer-initiated arbitration, was either mentioned
in or could be reasonably identified from the body of the
arbitration claim as a registered person who was involved in one or
more of the alleged sales practice violations.
\19\ If a broker is not named as a party in the customer
arbitration, brokers may seek to expunge customer dispute
information by: (1) Asking a party to the arbitration, usually the
firm, to request expungement on his or her behalf; (2) seeking to
intervene in the customer arbitration; (3) initiating a new
arbitration in which the unnamed person requests expungement and
names the customer or firm as the respondent; or (4) going directly
to court (without first going to arbitration).
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FINRA believes that re-filing an expungement request that has been
denied by an arbitration panel undermines the integrity of the
arbitration process and the information in the CRD system. Arbitration
awards are final and binding on the parties. If an associated person
seeks to challenge an arbitration award, the associated person can do
so by filing a motion to vacate in court.
In addition, some associated persons make second requests for
expungement after withdrawing or deciding not to pursue an expungement
request made in a customer arbitration, believing that another panel
who has not heard the merits of the claim may be more likely to
recommend expungement. FINRA is concerned about this practice of
``arbitrator shopping,'' particularly when associated persons withdraw
an original expungement request after the arbitration panel has been
made aware of evidence that could result in the denial of the
expungement request.
On December 6, 2017, FINRA published Notice 17-42 \20\ to seek
comment on a variety of changes to the process of arbitrating
expungement requests, including establishing a roster of arbitrators
with additional training and specific backgrounds or experience from
which a panel would be selected to decide an associated person's
request for expungement of customer dispute information. The
arbitrators from this roster would decide straight-in requests. As
discussed below in Item II.C., FINRA received 70 comment letters on
Notice 17-42 that reflected a variety of perspectives and different
suggestions regarding how to proceed. The proposed rule change is
responsive to concerns raised by commenters and would include the
following primary changes:
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\20\ See https://www.finra.org/industry/notices/17-42.
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[rtarr8] Expungement Requests in Customer Arbitrations
[cir] An associated person named in a customer arbitration would be
required to request expungement during the customer arbitration or
forfeit the ability to request expungement of that same disclosure in
any subsequent proceeding.
[cir] A named party from a customer arbitration would be permitted
to request expungement during the customer arbitration on-behalf-of an
unnamed person pursuant to specified conditions and limitations.
[cir] If a named associated person or party on-behalf-of an unnamed
person requests expungement during the customer arbitration and the
arbitration closes by award after a hearing,\21\ the panel from the
customer arbitration would be required to decide the expungement
request during the customer arbitration and issue a decision on the
request in the award.
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\21\ Under the Codes, a ``hearing'' means the hearing on the
merits of the arbitration. See FINRA Rules 12100(o) and 13100(o).
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[cir] If a named associated person or party on-behalf-of an unnamed
person requests expungement during the customer arbitration and the
arbitration closes other than by award or by award without a hearing,
an associated person may only pursue an expungement request by filing a
straight-in request under the Industry Code against the member firm at
which the associated person was associated at the time the dispute
arose.
[rtarr8] Expungement Requests Under the Industry Code
[cir] All straight-in requests \22\ would be required to be filed
under the Industry
[[Page 62145]]
Code against the member firm at which the associated person was
associated at the time the dispute arose and decided by a panel
selected from a roster of arbitrators with enhanced experience and
training (``Special Arbitrator Roster'').
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\22\ A straight-in request would include a request to expunge
customer dispute information filed under the Industry Code: (1) By
an associated person named in a customer arbitration after the
customer arbitration closes other than by award or by award without
a hearing; (2) arising from a customer complaint or civil litigation
rather than a customer arbitration; or (3) by an associated person
who was the subject of a customer arbitration, but unnamed, and
where a named party in the customer arbitration did not request
expungement on-behalf-of the unnamed associated person, or where a
named party made an on-behalf-of request, but the customer
arbitration closed other than by award or by award without a
hearing.
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[cir] If an associated person withdraws a straight-in request after
a panel from the Special Arbitrator Roster is appointed, the case would
be closed with prejudice.
[rtarr8] Special Arbitrator Roster
[cir] A three-person panel selected from the Special Arbitrator
Roster would decide straight-in requests.
[cir] The parties would not be permitted to agree to fewer than
three arbitrators from the Special Arbitrator Roster to decide
straight-in requests.
[cir] Arbitrators on the Special Arbitrator Roster would be
required to be public arbitrators who are eligible for the chairperson
roster and who have fully met the following additional qualifications:
(1) Evidenced successful completion of, and agreement with, enhanced
expungement training provided by FINRA; and (2) service as an
arbitrator through award on at least four customer-initiated
arbitrations administered by FINRA or by another self-regulatory
organization (``SRO'') in which a hearing was held.
[cir] The Neutral List Selection System (``NLSS'') would randomly
select the three public chairpersons from the Special Arbitrator Roster
to decide straight-in requests. The first arbitrator selected would be
the chair of the panel. The parties would not be permitted to stipulate
to the use of pre-selected arbitrators.
[cir] An associated person who files a straight-in request would
not be permitted to strike any arbitrators selected by NLSS or
stipulate to the arbitrator's removal, but would be permitted to
challenge any arbitrator selected for cause. If an arbitrator is
removed, NLSS would randomly select a replacement.
[rtarr8] Time Limitations on Requests for Expungement
[cir] For customer dispute information reported to the CRD system
after the effective date of the proposed rule change, the proposal
would provide that an associated person would be barred from requesting
expungement if: (1) More than two years have elapsed since the close of
the customer arbitration or civil litigation that gave rise to the
customer dispute information; or (2) there was no customer arbitration
or civil litigation involving the customer dispute information, and
more than six years have elapsed since the date that the customer
complaint was initially reported to the CRD system.
[cir] For customer dispute information reported to the CRD system
before the effective date of the proposed rule change, the proposal
would require an associated person to request expungement as a
straight-in request under the Industry Code: (1) Within two years of
the effective date of the proposed rule change for disclosures that
arose from a customer arbitration or civil litigation that closed on or
prior to the effective date; and (2) within six years of the effective
date of the proposed rule change for customer complaints initially
reported to the CRD system on or prior to the effective date.
[rtarr8] Expungement Requests During a Simplified Arbitration
[cir] If a party requests expungement during a simplified
arbitration, the single arbitrator in the simplified arbitration would
be required to decide the expungement request, regardless of how the
simplified arbitration case closes (e.g., even if the case settles).
[cir] If an associated person does not request expungement during
the simplified arbitration, the request may be filed as a straight-in
request under the Industry Code against the member firm at which the
associated person was associated at the time the dispute arose, and be
decided by a three-person panel randomly selected from the Special
Arbitrator Roster.
[rtarr8] Expungement Hearings
[cir] Establish procedural requirements that arbitrators and
parties must follow for expungement hearings.
[rtarr8] State and Customer Notifications
[cir] Establish requirements for notifying state securities
regulators and customers of expungement requests.
Under the proposed rule change, an associated person would only be
permitted to seek expungement of customer dispute information in the
arbitration forum administered by FINRA by complying with the
requirements of proposed Rules 12805 (expungement requests in a
customer arbitration), 13805 (straight-in requests under the Industry
Code) or 12800(d) (expungement requests in a simplified customer
arbitration).
The proposed rule change, as revised in response to comments on
Notice 17-42, is set forth in further detail below.\23\
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\23\ The proposed rule change would apply to all members,
including members that are funding portals or have elected to be
treated as capital acquisition brokers (``CABs''), given that the
funding portal and CAB rule sets incorporate the impacted FINRA
rules by reference.
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(II) Proposed Rule Change
The discussion below of the proposed rule change is divided into
six areas: (A) Requests for expungement under the Customer Code; (B)
straight-in requests under the Industry Code and the Special Arbitrator
Roster; (C) limitations on expungement requests; (D) procedural
requirements related to all expungement hearings; (E) notifications to
customers and states regarding expungement requests; and (F)
expungement requests during simplified customer arbitrations.
A. Requests for Expungement Under the Customer Code
FINRA Rule 12805 provides a list of requirements that arbitrators
must meet before they may recommend expungement.\24\ The rule does not,
however, provide guidance for associated persons on how and when they
may request expungement during the customer arbitration, or on when
arbitrators must make expungement determinations. The proposed rule
change would amend FINRA Rule 12805 to set forth requirements for
expungement requests filed by an associated person during a customer
arbitration.
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\24\ FINRA Rule 12805 provides that a panel must comply with the
following criteria before recommending expungement: (1) Hold a
recorded hearing to decide the issue of expungement; (2) review
settlement documents, and consider the amount of payments made to
any party and any other terms and conditions of the settlement; (3)
indicate in the award which of the grounds in FINRA Rule 2080 is the
basis for expungement and provide a brief written explanation of the
reasons for recommending expungement; and (4) assess all forum fees
for hearing sessions in which the sole topic is the determination of
the appropriateness of expungement against the parties requesting
expungement. See also FINRA Rule 13805.
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1. Expungement Requests During the Customer Arbitration
a. By a Respondent Named in a Customer Arbitration
Under current practice, an associated person who is named as a
respondent in a customer arbitration (``named associated person'') may
request expungement at any time during the customer arbitration or
separately from the customer arbitration in a straight-in request.\25\
If a named associated person
[[Page 62146]]
requests expungement during the customer arbitration, does not withdraw
the request and the case goes to hearing and closes by award, the panel
in the customer arbitration will also decide the expungement request
and include the decision as part of the customer's award.\26\ If the
customer arbitration does not close by award after a hearing (e.g.,
settles), and the associated person continues to pursue the expungement
request, the panel from the customer arbitration may hold an
expungement-only hearing as required by FINRA Rule 12805 to decide the
expungement request.
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\25\ There are several ways in which a named associated person
may request expungement during a customer arbitration. The request
may be included in the answer to the statement of claim that must be
submitted within 45 days of receipt of the statement of claim, and
may include other claims and remedies requested. See FINRA Rules
12303(a) and (b); see also FINRA Rules 13303(a) and (b). The
expungement request may also be included in other pleadings (e.g., a
counterclaim, a cross claim, or a third party claim) and must be
filed with the Director of the Office of Dispute Resolution
(``Director'') through the Party Portal. See FINRA Rules 12100(x)
and 12300(b). The associated person may also request at any time
during the case (outside of a pleading) that the panel consider the
person's expungement request during the hearing. Under FINRA Rule
12503, such a request is treated like a motion, which gives the
other parties an opportunity to object. If there is an objection,
the panel must decide the motion pursuant to FINRA Rule 12503(d)(5).
See also FINRA Rules 13503 and 13503(d)(5).
\26\ Under the Codes, a customer's or claimant's damage request
determines whether a single arbitrator or a three-person panel will
consider and decide an arbitration case. See FINRA Rules 12401 and
13401. For ease of reference, when discussing expungement requests
during customer arbitrations under proposed Rule 12805, unless
otherwise specified, the rule filing uses the term ``panel'' to mean
either a panel or single arbitrator.
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Under the proposed rule change, if a named associated person seeks
to request expungement of customer dispute information arising from the
customer's statement of claim, the named associated person must make
the expungement request during the customer arbitration.\27\ As
discussed below, the request would be subject to limitations on how and
when the request may be made.\28\ In addition, the Director would be
authorized to deny the forum to expungement requests during a customer
arbitration that do not arise out of the customer arbitration.\29\ If
the associated person does not request expungement during the customer
arbitration, he or she would forfeit the opportunity to seek
expungement of the same customer dispute information in any subsequent
proceeding.\30\
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\27\ See proposed Rule 12805(a)(1)(A).
\28\ See also infra Item II.A.1.(II)C., ``Limitations on
Expungement Requests.''
\29\ See proposed Rules 12203(b) and 12805(a).
\30\ See proposed Rule 12805(a).
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FINRA is proposing to require that a named associated person
request expungement during the customer arbitration because, if the
arbitration closes by award after a hearing, the panel from the
customer arbitration will be best situated to decide the related issue
of expungement. Requiring the named associated person to request
expungement in the customer arbitration increases the likelihood that a
panel will have input from all parties and access to all of the
evidence, testimony and other documents to make an informed decision on
the expungement request.
FINRA recognizes that this requirement could result in some named
associated persons filing expungement requests to preserve their right
to make a request, regardless of the potential outcome. FINRA believes
that the potential costs that would be incurred by associated persons,
arbitrators and the forum if named associated persons file expungement
requests to preserve the ability to request expungement are appropriate
given the potential benefit of having customer input and a complete
factual record for the panel to decide an expungement request. In
addition, certain aspects of the proposed rule change may limit the
filing of requests without regard to the potential outcome. For
example, under the proposed rule change, named associated persons would
be permitted to request expungement no later than 30 days before the
first scheduled hearing.\31\ This proposed amendment would provide the
named associated person with a reasonable amount of time to consider,
likely after receiving any discovery from the claimant, whether to file
the request because it could meet one or more of the FINRA Rule
2080(b)(1) grounds for expungement.\32\
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\31\ See proposed Rule 12805(a)(1)(C); see also infra Item
II.A.1.(II)A.1.a.i., ``Method of Requesting Expungement.''
\32\ In addition, FINRA notes that the SEC has approved changes
to FINRA rules to apply minimum fees to expungement requests. See
supra note 17.
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i. Method of Requesting Expungement
The proposed rule change would limit how and when expungement
requests may be made during the customer arbitration. Under the
proposed rule change, if a named associated person requests expungement
during the customer arbitration, the request must be included in the
answer or a pleading requesting expungement.\33\ If the request is
included in the answer, it must be filed within 45 days of receipt of
the customer's statement of claim in accordance with existing
requirements under the Codes.\34\ If the named associated person
requests expungement in a pleading requesting expungement, the request
must be filed no later than 30 days before the first scheduled hearing
begins.\35\
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\33\ See proposed Rule 12805(a)(1)(C)(i).
\34\ See supra note 25.
\35\ See proposed Rule 12805(a)(1)(C)(i).
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FINRA believes the proposed rule change would provide a reasonable
amount of time for the requesting party to make an informed decision
about whether to request expungement while also providing the parties
with reasonable case-preparation time, since the expungement issues
will overlap with the issues raised by the customer's claim.
In addition, the proposed filing deadline would provide the
Director a reasonable amount of time to notify state securities
regulators of the expungement request.\36\ If a named associated person
seeks to request expungement after the 30-day filing deadline, the
panel would be required to decide whether to grant an extension and
permit the request or whether to deny the request for expungement.\37\
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\36\ See proposed Rule 12805(b); see also infra Item
II.A.1.(II)E.3., ``State Notification of Expungement Requests.''
\37\ See proposed Rule 12805(a)(1)(C). The proposed amendments
would provide that if the expungement request is not filed in a
pleading no later than 30 days before the first scheduled hearing,
then FINRA Rule 12309(b) would require the associated person to file
a motion pursuant to FINRA Rule 12503, seeking an extension of the
30-day deadline to file the expungement request.
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ii. Required Contents of an Expungement Request
Under the proposed rule change, a request for expungement by a
named associated person in a customer arbitration must include the
applicable filing fee under the Codes.\38\ In addition, a named
associated person would be required to provide the CRD number of the
party requesting expungement, each CRD occurrence number that is the
subject of the request and the case name and docket number that gave
rise to the disclosure, if applicable.\39\
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\38\ See proposed Rule 12805(a)(1)(C)(ii)a.; see also supra note
17.
\39\ See proposed Rule 12805(a)(1)(C)(ii)b.-d. An occurrence is
a disclosure event that is reported to the CRD system via one or
more Disclosure Reporting Pages. Each occurrence contains details
regarding a specific disclosure event. An occurrence can have as
many as three sources reporting the same event: Forms U4, U5 and U6.
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The proposed rule change would also require the party requesting
expungement to explain whether expungement of the same customer dispute
information was (i) previously requested and, if so (ii) how it was
[[Page 62147]]
decided.\40\ This requirement would assist with implementation of the
proposed prohibition on parties making second requests for expungement,
discussed in more detail below.\41\ This proposed requirement is also
consistent with language in the existing Guidance stating that
arbitrators should ask a party requesting expungement whether an
arbitration panel or a court previously denied expungement of the
customer dispute information at issue and, if there was a prior denial,
to deny the expungement request.\42\
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\40\ See proposed Rule 12805(a)(1)(C)(ii)e.
\41\ See infra Item II.A.1.(II)A.1.b.i., ``Method of Requesting
Expungement On-Behalf-Of an Unnamed Person.''
\42\ See supra note 3.
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Under the proposed rule change, if an expungement request fails to
include any of the proposed requirements for requesting expungement,
the request would be considered deficient and would not be served
unless the deficiency is corrected.\43\ These requirements would help
ensure that FINRA, the panel and the parties understand who is
requesting expungement and which disclosure is the subject of the
request. Further, if the disclosure arose from a customer arbitration,
the case name and docket number would provide the panel that is
considering the expungement request with information about the dispute
that gave rise to the disclosure that the party is seeking to expunge.
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\43\ See proposed Rule 12307(a)(8)-(11) (setting forth reasons a
claim may be deficient).
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FINRA believes these proposed requirements for parties requesting
expungement are necessary for the timely and orderly consideration of
expungement requests as well as to maintain the integrity of the data
in the CRD system.
b. Expungement Requests by a Party Named in the Customer Arbitration
On-Behalf-Of an Unnamed Person
The Codes do not specifically address expungement requests by a
party named in a customer arbitration on-behalf-of an unnamed
person.\44\ Under current practice, a party to a customer arbitration
may file an on-behalf-of request for expungement during the customer
arbitration. If the party (typically, a firm) files the request and the
customer arbitration closes by award after a hearing, the panel will
decide the expungement request and include the decision in the award.
If the customer arbitration does not close by award after a hearing
(e.g., settles), either the requesting party or the unnamed person
could ask the panel to consider and decide the expungement request
before it disbands. In this circumstance, the panel from the customer
arbitration will hold a separate expungement-only hearing to decide the
expungement request.
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\44\ The proposed rule change would define an unnamed person as
``an associated person, including a formerly associated person, who
is identified in a Form U4, Form U5, or Form U6, as having been the
subject of an investment-related, customer-initiated arbitration
claim that alleged that the associated person or formerly associated
person was involved in one or more sales practice violations, but
who was not named as a respondent in the arbitration claim.'' See
proposed Rule 12100(ff).
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The proposed rule change would codify the ability of a party in the
customer arbitration to file an on-behalf-of request during a customer
arbitration.\45\ Under the proposed rule change, a party to a customer
arbitration may file an on-behalf-of request that seeks to expunge
customer dispute information arising from the customer's statement of
claim, provided the request is eligible for arbitration under proposed
Rule 12805.\46\ Filing an on-behalf-of request would be permissive, not
mandatory.\47\ However, as discussed below, if the named party and the
unnamed person agree to such a request, FINRA would require them to
sign a form consenting to the on-behalf-of request which would help
ensure that the unnamed person is fully aware of the request and that
the firm is agreeing to represent the unnamed person for the purpose of
requesting expungement during the customer arbitration.\48\
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\45\ See proposed Rule 12805(a)(2).
\46\ See proposed Rule 12805(a)(2)(B).
\47\ See proposed Rule 12805(a)(2)(A).
\48\ A customer complaint can be reported to the CRD system via
a Form U4 or Form U5. Pursuant to FINRA Rule 1010, an associated
person should be made aware of the filing of a Form U4 and any
amendments thereto by the associated person's member firm. In
addition, Article V, Section 3 of the FINRA By-Laws of the
Corporation requires that a member firm provide an associated person
a copy of an amended Form U5, including one reporting a customer
complaint involving the associated person. FINRA also provides
several methods for associated persons and former associated persons
to check their records (e.g., by requesting an Individual CRD
Snapshot or online through BrokerCheck).
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i. Method of Requesting Expungement On-Behalf-Of an Unnamed Person
The unnamed person would be required to consent to the on-behalf-of
request in writing.\49\ In particular, the party filing an on-behalf-of
request would be required to submit a signed Form Requesting
Expungement on Behalf of an Unnamed Person (``Form'') and a statement
requesting expungement with the Director.\50\ The proposed rule change
would not require that an on-behalf-of request be included in an answer
or pleading requesting expungement (although it could be), since the
request seeks relief on-behalf-of a person who is not a party to the
arbitration. However, the party making the request would be required to
serve the request, which would include the Form, on all parties no
later than 30 days before the first scheduled hearing.\51\
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\49\ See proposed Rule 12805(a)(2)(A).
\50\ See proposed Rule 12805(a)(2)(C)(ii). The unnamed person
whose CRD record would be expunged and the party requesting
expungement on the unnamed person's behalf must sign the Form.
\51\ See proposed Rule 12805(a)(2)(C)(iii). The 30-day deadline
is the same as the proposed deadline for a named associated person
to request expungement in a customer arbitration.
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FINRA believes that requiring submission of the Form would help
address the issue of an unnamed person not being notified of the on-
behalf-of request. As discussed above, FINRA is concerned that some
associated persons are filing arbitration claims seeking expungement of
the same customer dispute information that was the subject of a
previous denial by a panel of an on-behalf-of request. By signing the
Form, the unnamed person would be consenting to the on-behalf-of
request and agreeing to be bound by the panel's decision on the
request.\52\ In addition, the Form would provide that, if the customer
arbitration closes by award after a hearing, the unnamed person would
be barred from filing a request for expungement for the same customer
dispute information in a subsequent proceeding, and the unnamed
person's signature would serve as acknowledgement of this consequence.
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\52\ By signing the Form, the unnamed person would also be
agreeing to maintain the confidentiality of documents and
information from the customer arbitration to which the unnamed
person is given access and to adhere to any confidentiality
agreements or orders associated with the customer arbitration. See
proposed Rule 12805(a)(2)(D). Failure of the unnamed person to
comply with this provision could subject the unnamed person to a
claim for damages by an aggrieved party.
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ii. Required Contents of an On-Behalf-Of Expungement Request
Under the proposed rule change, an on-behalf-of request would be
required to include the same elements as a request for expungement by a
named associated person during a customer arbitration.\53\ Thus, the
party requesting expungement on-behalf-of an unnamed person (typically,
the firm) would be required to provide the applicable filing fee, the
CRD number of the unnamed person, each CRD occurrence number that is
the subject of the request and the
[[Page 62148]]
case name and docket number that gave rise to the disclosure, if
applicable. In addition, as discussed above, the party requesting
expungement would be required to include the Form, signed by the
unnamed person whose CRD record would be expunged and the party filing
the request.
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\53\ See proposed Rule 12805(a)(1)(C)(ii); see also supra Item
II.A.1.(II)A.1.a.ii., ``Required Contents of an Expungement
Request.''
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c. Deciding Expungement Requests During Customer Arbitrations
The proposed amendments would require that if there is a request
for expungement by a named associated person or on-behalf-of an unnamed
person during a customer arbitration, the panel from the customer
arbitration must decide the expungement request if the customer
arbitration closes by award after a hearing.\54\ If the customer
arbitration closes other than by award (e.g., settles) or by award
without a hearing, the panel would not consider the expungement
request.\55\ Instead, the associated person would have the option of
filing a request to expunge the same customer dispute information as a
new claim under proposed Rule 13805 against the member firm at which he
or she was associated at the time the customer dispute arose.\56\ A
panel from the Special Arbitrator Roster would decide such an
expungement request, as discussed in more detail below.\57\
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\54\ See proposed Rule 12805(a)(1)(D)(i) and (a)(2)(E)(i).
\55\ See proposed Rules 12805(a)(1)(D)(ii) and (a)(2)(E)(ii).
\56\ See supra note 54. Under the Codes, a ``member'' includes
any broker or dealer admitted to membership in FINRA, whether or not
the membership has been terminated, suspended, cancelled, revoked,
the member has been expelled or barred from FINRA or the member is
otherwise defunct. See FINRA Rules 12100(s) and 13100(q); see also
Securities Exchange Act Release No. 88254 (February 20, 2020), 85 FR
11157 (February 26, 2020) (Order Approving File No. SR-FINRA-2019-
027).
\57\ See infra Item II.A.1.(II)B.2., ``Panel from the Special
Arbitrator Roster Decides Requests Filed Under the Industry Code.''
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i. Panel Decides the Expungement Request if the Customer's Claim Closes
by Award After a Hearing
Currently, if a named associated person requests expungement, or a
party files an on-behalf-of request, and the customer's claim closes by
award after a hearing, the panel may consider and decide the
expungement request during the customer arbitration and issue its
decision in the award. If, however, the party requesting expungement
does not raise the issue of expungement during the hearing, the panel
will not decide the request and may deem it withdrawn without
prejudice.\58\ In this instance, the associated person has the option
to file the request again at a later date.
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\58\ See FINRA Rules 12702 and 13702.
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Under the proposed rule change, if, during the customer
arbitration, a named associated person requests expungement or a party
files an on-behalf-of request, and the customer's claim closes by award
after a hearing, the panel in the customer arbitration would be
required to consider and decide the request for expungement during the
customer arbitration and issue a decision on the expungement request in
the award.\59\ The panel would be required to decide the request even
if the requesting party withdraws the request or fails to present a
case in support of the request. In this instance, the panel must deny
the expungement request with prejudice.\60\ This requirement would
foreclose the ability of associated persons to withdraw expungement
requests to avoid having their requests decided by the panel who heard
the evidence on the customer's arbitration claim, and then seeking to
re-file the request and receive a new list of arbitrators and a
potentially more favorable decision.
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\59\ See proposed Rules 12805(a)(1)(D)(i) and 12805(a)(2)(E)(i).
\60\ See proposed Rules 12805(a)(1)(D)(i) and 12805(a)(2)(E)(i).
A party requesting expungement on-behalf-of an unnamed person may
withdraw or not pursue an expungement request only with the written
consent of the unnamed person. Under such circumstances, the panel
would deny the expungement request with prejudice. See proposed Rule
12805(a)(2)(E)(i).
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ii. Panel Does Not Decide Expungement if the Customer's Claim Closes
Other Than by Award or by Award Without a Hearing
Currently, if a named associated person requests expungement or a
party files an on-behalf-of request and the customer arbitration does
not close by award after a hearing (e.g., settles) and the associated
person or requesting party, if it is an on-behalf-of request, continues
to pursue the expungement request, the panel from the customer
arbitration will hold a separate expungement-only hearing to consider
and decide the expungement request. If the named associated person or
party requesting expungement does not request that the panel hold a
separate, expungement-only hearing, the panel may deem the request
withdrawn without prejudice, and the associated person has the option
to file the request again at a later date.
The proposed rule change would provide that if, during a customer
arbitration, a named associated person requests expungement or a party
files an on-behalf-of request and the customer arbitration closes other
than by award or by award without a hearing, the panel from the
customer arbitration would not be permitted to decide the expungement
request.\61\ Instead, the associated person would be required to seek
expungement by filing a request to expunge the same customer dispute
information as a straight-in request under proposed Rule 13805, where a
panel from the Special Arbitrator Roster would decide the request.\62\
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\61\ See proposed Rules 12805(a)(1)(D)(ii)a. and
12805(a)(2)(E)(ii)a.
\62\ See infra Item II.A.1.(II)B.2., ``Panel from the Special
Arbitrator Roster Decides Requests Filed Under the Industry Code.''
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As discussed above, expungement requests may be complex to resolve,
particularly straight-in requests where customers typically do not
participate in the expungement hearing. Thus, having three arbitrators
available to ask questions, request evidence and to serve generally as
fact-finders in the absence of customer input would help ensure that a
complete factual record is created to support the arbitrators' decision
in such expungement hearings.
FINRA believes this is the right approach because the panel
selected by the parties in the customer arbitration has not heard the
full merits of the case and, therefore, may not bring to bear any
special insights in determining whether to recommend expungement. In
addition, customers or their representative have little incentive to
participate in an expungement hearing once their case has settled.
Requiring that an associated person file the expungement request as a
straight-in request under the Industry Code to be heard and decided by
a three-person panel selected from the Special Arbitrator Roster would
strengthen the expungement framework. As discussed in more detail
below, this corps of specially trained arbitrators would follow the
procedures set forth in proposed Rule 13805 and make a decision about
whether FINRA Rule 2080(b)(1) grounds exist to recommend expungement,
keeping in mind the importance of maintaining the integrity of
information in the CRD system.
2. No Straight-In Requests Against Customers
The proposed amendments would prohibit an associated person from
filing a straight-in request against a customer.\63\ Currently,
straight-in requests are rarely filed against a customer.\64\ FINRA
does not believe that
[[Page 62149]]
customers should be compelled to participate in a separate proceeding
to decide an expungement request after the customer has resolved his or
her arbitration claim or civil litigation, or submitted his or her
customer complaint. Accordingly, the proposed amendments would prohibit
an associated person from filing a straight-in request against a
customer.
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\63\ See proposed Rules 12805(a)(1)(D)(ii)c. and
12805(a)(2)(E)(ii)c.
\64\ From January 2016 through June 2019, FINRA is able to
identify 5,718 requests to expunge customer dispute information. Of
those, 3,114 were filed as straight-in requests; 66 of the straight-
in requests were filed solely against a customer. See infra Item
II.B.2., ``Economic Baseline.''
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3. No Intervening in Customer Arbitrations To Request Expungement
The proposed amendments would also prohibit unnamed persons from
intervening in a customer arbitration and requesting expungement.\65\
If the associated person is neither a party to the arbitration nor the
subject of an on-behalf-of request by another party to the arbitration,
the associated person should not be able to intervene in the customers'
arbitration to request expungement. In these circumstances, the
associated person's conduct is unlikely to be fully addressed by the
parties during the customer arbitration, and FINRA does not believe
that the customer should have the presentation of their case
interrupted by an associated person's intervention to request
expungement. In addition, there have been instances in customer
arbitrations in which the unnamed person learns that the customer's
arbitration case is nearing conclusion. The associated person (or his
or her representative) then files a motion to intervene in the case to
ask the panel to consider recommending expungement. As an unnamed
person, the individual is not a party to the case and, therefore, has
not made any arguments in support of the expungement request. Further,
if the motion is granted, the parties to the case will be required to
wait for a decision on the expungement request (which may necessitate
another hearing) before their dispute is resolved, causing delay and
additional cost to the parties.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\65\ See proposed Rule 12805(a)(2)(E)(iii).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Accordingly, under the proposed rule change, associated persons
would be prohibited from intervening in a customer arbitration and
requesting expungement. Instead, the unnamed person would have the
option to file the request as a new claim under proposed Rule 13805,
where a panel from the Special Arbitrator Roster would decide the
request.\66\
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\66\ See infra Item II.A.1.(II)B.2., ``Panel from the Special
Arbitrator Roster Decides Requests Filed Under the Industry Code.''
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
B. Straight-In Requests and the Special Arbitrator Roster
Under the proposed rule change, all requests to expunge disclosures
arising from customer complaints or civil litigations would be required
to be made as straight-in requests under proposed Rule 13805.\67\ In
addition, an associated person could request expungement of customer
dispute information arising from a customer arbitration under proposed
Rule 13805 if: (1) The associated person is named in the arbitration or
is the subject of an on-behalf-of request and the customer arbitration
closes other than by award or by award without a hearing; or (2) the
associated person is the subject of a customer arbitration, but is
neither named in the arbitration nor the subject of an on-behalf-of
request, and the customer arbitration closes for any reason. If an
associated person requests expungement under proposed Rule 13805, a
three-person panel selected from the Special Arbitrator Roster in
accordance with proposed Rule 13806, would decide the expungement
request.\68\
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\67\ See proposed Rule 13805(a)(1).
\68\ See infra Item II.A.1.(II)B.2.a. and b. (discussing
eligibility requirements for and composition of the Special
Arbitrator Roster).
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1. Filing a Straight-In Request Under the Industry Code
a. Applicability
Under the proposed rule change, an associated person requesting
expungement of customer dispute information under the Industry Code
must make a straight-in request by filing a statement of claim in
accordance with FINRA Rule 13302 against a member firm at which he or
she was associated at the time the customer dispute arose, unless the
request is ineligible for arbitration under proposed Rule
13805(a)(2).\69\ Thus, the only way to request expungement of customer
dispute information under the Industry Code would be to file the
request under proposed Rule 13805.
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\69\ See proposed Rule 13805(a)(1). FINRA Rule 13302 provides,
in relevant part, that to initiate an arbitration, a claimant must
file with the Director a signed and dated Submission Agreement, and
a statement of claim specifying the relevant facts and remedies
requested through the Party Portal.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The requirement that the associated person file the straight-in
request against the member firm at which he or she was associated at
the time the customer dispute arose would help ensure that there is a
connection between the respondent firm and the subject of the
expungement request. For example, the firm at which the person
requesting expungement was associated at the time the dispute arose
should have knowledge of the dispute and access to documents or other
evidence relating to the dispute. In addition, the proposed requirement
would help ensure that the panel from the Special Arbitrator Roster
would be able to request evidence from a member firm with information
that is relevant to the expungement request. If the requisite
connection is not present, the Director would be authorized to deny the
forum to the request.\70\
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\70\ See proposed Rule 13203(b).
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b. Required Contents of Straight-In Requests
The required contents of a straight-in request would be the same as
those required for expungement requests filed under proposed Rule
12805.\71\ Thus, the associated person's straight-in request would be
required to contain the applicable filing fee; \72\ the CRD number of
the party requesting expungement; each CRD occurrence number that is
the subject of the request; the case name and docket number that gave
rise to the disclosure, if applicable; and an explanation of whether
expungement of the same customer dispute information was previously
requested and, if so, how it was decided.\73\ In addition, as discussed
below, the proposed rule change would impose limitations on when such
requests may be made.\74\
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\71\ See supra Item II.A.1.(II)A.1.a.ii., ``Required Contents of
an Expungement Request.''
\72\ FINRA would not assess a second filing fee when an
associated person files a straight-in request if the associated
person or the requesting party in the case of an on-behalf-of
request, had previously paid the filing fee to request expungement
of the same customer dispute information during a customer
arbitration.
\73\ See proposed Rule 13805(a)(3).
\74\ See infra Item II.A.1.(II)C., ``Limitations on Expungement
Requests.'' As discussed in more detail below in Item II.A.1.(II)C.,
the straight-in request would be ineligible for arbitration under
the Industry Code if: (1) A panel held a hearing to consider the
merits of the associated person's request for expungement of the
same customer dispute information; (2) a court previously denied the
associated person's request to expunge the same customer dispute
information; (3) the customer arbitration, civil litigation or
customer complaint that gave rise to the customer dispute
information is not concluded; (4) more than two years has elapsed
since the customer arbitration or civil litigation that gave rise to
the customer dispute information has closed; or (5) there was no
customer arbitration or civil litigation that gave rise to the
customer dispute information and more than six years has elapsed
since the date that the customer complaint was initially reported to
the CRD system. See proposed Rule 13805(a)(2).
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2. Panel From the Special Arbitrator Roster Decides Requests Filed
Under the Industry Code
If a straight-in request is filed in accordance with proposed Rule
13805, a three-person panel selected from the
[[Page 62150]]
Special Arbitrator Roster pursuant to proposed Rule 13806 would be
required to hold an expungement hearing, decide the expungement request
and issue an award.\75\ The proposed amendments would also provide that
if the associated person withdraws or does not pursue the request, the
panel would be required to deny the expungement request with
prejudice.\76\ This requirement would foreclose the ability of
associated persons to withdraw expungement requests to avoid having
their requests decided by the panel, and then seeking to re-file the
request with the hope of obtaining a potentially more favorable panel.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\75\ See proposed Rule 13805(a)(4).
\76\ See supra note 75.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The proposed rule change would include several requirements to help
ensure that arbitrators on the Special Arbitrator Roster have the
qualifications and training to decide straight-in requests.
a. Eligibility Requirements for the Special Arbitrator Roster
Arbitrators on the Special Arbitrator Roster would be public
arbitrators who are eligible for the chairperson roster.\77\ Public
arbitrators are not employed in the securities industry and do not
devote 20 percent or more of their professional work to the securities
industry or to parties in disputes concerning investment accounts or
transactions or employment relationships within the financial
industry.\78\ Arbitrators are eligible for the chairperson roster if
they have completed chairperson training provided by FINRA and: (1)
Have a law degree and are a member of a bar of at least one
jurisdiction and have served as an arbitrator through award on at least
one arbitration administered by an SRO in which hearings were held; or
(2) have served as an arbitrator through award on at least three
arbitrations administered by an SRO in which hearings were held.\79\
These requirements would help ensure that the persons conducting the
expungement hearing are impartial and experienced in managing and
conducting arbitration hearings in the forum.\80\
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\77\ See proposed Rule 13806(b); see also FINRA Rule 12400(c).
\78\ See supra note 8.
\79\ See FINRA Rule 12400(c). For purposes of this proposed rule
change, public arbitrators who are eligible for the chairperson
roster would include those arbitrators who have met the chairperson
eligibility requirements of FINRA Rule 12400(c), regardless of
whether they have already served as a chair on an arbitration case.
\80\ The Task Force suggested that the arbitrators on its
recommended special arbitration panel be chair-qualified, in part
because of the training that arbitrators must complete before they
can be added to the chairperson roster. See FINRA's ``Advanced
Arbitrator Training,'' available at https://www.finra.org/arbitration-mediation/advanced-arbitrator-training. See also supra
note 13.
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Further, the public chairpersons must have evidenced successful
completion of, and agreement with, enhanced expungement training
provided by FINRA.\81\ FINRA currently provides an Expungement Training
module for arbitrators.\82\ This training, however, would be expanded
for arbitrators seeking to qualify for the Special Arbitrator Roster.
This would allow FINRA to further emphasize, with the subset of
arbitrators on the Special Arbitrator Roster, the unique, distinct role
they play in deciding whether to recommend a request to expunge
customer dispute information from a broker's CRD record, and that
expungement should be granted in limited circumstances and only if one
or more of the grounds in FINRA Rule 2080(b)(1) is met.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\81\ See proposed Rule 13806(b)(2)(A).
\82\ See supra note 80. FINRA requires arbitrators to take
mandatory online training that focuses on the Guidance. In addition,
among other tools, FINRA provides Neutral Workshops (an online
discussion on specific arbitration topics) and articles in The
Neutral Corner (a quarterly publication that provides arbitrators
and mediators with updates on important rules and procedures within
the FINRA arbitration forum) to keep arbitrators informed about the
expungement process and to emphasize the critical role that
arbitrators play in maintaining the relevancy and integrity of
disclosure information in the CRD system and BrokerCheck. See
Neutral Workshop Audio and Video Files, Spring 2019 Neutral
Workshop: Expungement of Customer Dispute Information, https://www.finra.org/arbitration-mediation/neutral-workshop-audio-and-video-files; The Neutral Corner, https://www.finra.org/arbitration-mediation/neutral-corner-view.
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Under the proposed amendments, arbitrators on the Special
Arbitrator Roster would also be required to have served as an
arbitrator through award on at least four customer-initiated
arbitrations administered by FINRA or by another SRO in which a hearing
was held.\83\ FINRA believes that if an arbitrator has served on four
arbitrations through to award, it would indicate that the arbitrator
has gained the knowledge and experience in the forum to conduct
hearings.\84\
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\83\ See proposed Rule 13806(b)(2)(B). The hearing requirement
would exclude hearings conducted under the special proceeding option
of the simplified arbitration rules. See FINRA Rule 12800(c)(3)(B).
\84\ In 2019, 85 percent of FINRA customer arbitrations closed
other than by award. See Dispute Resolution Statistics, ``How
Arbitration Cases Close,'' available at https://www.finra.org/arbitration-mediation/dispute-resolution-statistics.
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b. Composition of the Panel
The proposed amendments would require that three randomly-selected
members of the Special Arbitrator Roster decide all expungement
requests filed under proposed Rule 13805.\85\ As discussed above,
expungement requests may be complex to resolve, particularly straight-
in requests where customers typically do not participate in the
expungement hearing. Thus, having three arbitrators available to ask
questions, request evidence and generally to serve as fact-finders in
the absence of customer input would help ensure that a complete factual
record is created to support the arbitrators' decision in such
expungement hearings.\86\
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\85\ See proposed Rule 13806(b)(1).
\86\ See supra Item II.A.1.(I)C., ``Concerns Regarding
Expungement'' (discussing the importance of having a three-person
panel decide straight-in requests).
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To minimize the potential for party influence in the arbitrator
selection process, the proposed rule change would require NLSS randomly
to select the three public chairpersons from the Special Arbitrator
Roster to decide an expungement request filed by an associated
person.\87\ The parties would not be permitted to agree to fewer than
three arbitrators. The associated person would not be permitted to
strike any arbitrators selected by NLSS nor stipulate to their
removal,\88\ but would be permitted to challenge any arbitrator
selected for cause.\89\ If an arbitrator is removed, NLSS would
randomly select a replacement.\90\
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\87\ See proposed Rule 13806(b)(1). The first arbitrator
selected would be the chair of the panel. See proposed Rule
13806(b)(3).
\88\ The parties also would not be permitted to stipulate to the
use of pre-selected arbitrators (i.e., arbitrators that the parties
find on their own to use in their cases). See proposed Rule
13806(b)(1).
\89\ See proposed Rule 13806(b)(4). In addition, before the
first hearing session begins, the Director may remove an arbitrator
for conflict of interest or bias, either upon request of a party or
on the Director's own initiative. See FINRA Rule 12407(a).
\90\ See proposed Rule 13806(b)(4); see also FINRA Rules
12402(g) and 12403(g).
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FINRA believes that the current process for selecting arbitrators--
striking and combining ranked lists--would not be appropriate to use to
select arbitrators to decide straight-in requests.\91\ In arbitrations
outside of the expungement context, the parties are typically adverse,
which means that during arbitrator selection, each side may rank
arbitrators on the lists whom they believe may be favorable to their
case.\92\ The adversarial nature of the proceedings serves to minimize
the impact of each party's influence in arbitrator selection.\93\ In
contrast, a
[[Page 62151]]
straight-in request filed by an associated person against a firm may
not be adversarial in nature. In addition, typically the customer or
customer's representative will not appear at the expungement hearing.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\91\ See generally FINRA Rules 12402 and 12403.
\92\ See infra note 189.
\93\ Once the parties have ranked the arbitrators, the Director
creates a combined ranked list of arbitrators based on the parties'
numerical rankings. The Director appoints the highest-ranked
available arbitrator from the combined list. See FINRA Rules
12402(e) and (f) and 12403(d) and (e).
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FINRA recognizes that the proposed arbitrator selection process for
straight-in requests would limit the associated person and member
firm's input on arbitration selection. However, the arbitrators on the
Special Arbitrator Roster would have the experience, qualifications and
training necessary to conduct a fair and impartial expungement hearing
in accordance with the proposed rules, and to render a recommendation
based on a complete factual record developed during the expungement
hearing. FINRA believes that the higher standards that the arbitrators
must meet to serve on the Special Arbitrator Roster should mitigate the
impact of the absence of party input on the selection of arbitrators.
In addition, associated persons and member firms would still be
permitted to challenge any arbitrator for cause.\94\
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\94\ See proposed Rule 13806(b)(4).
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C. Limitations on Expungement Requests
Currently, Rules 12805 and 13805 do not address when a party would
not be permitted to file an expungement request in the forum.\95\ The
Guidance, however, describes several circumstances in which an
expungement request should be ineligible for arbitration. The proposed
rule change would incorporate the limitations contained in the Guidance
as well as add time limits to when an associated person may file a
straight-in request.
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\95\ But see supra note 14 (describing time limits that apply to
all arbitration claims, including expungement requests).
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1. Limitations Applicable to Both Straight-In Requests and Expungement
Requests During a Customer Arbitration
The Guidance provides that if a panel or a court has issued an
award or decision denying an associated person's expungement request,
the associated person may not request expungement of the same customer
dispute information in another arbitration. In particular, the Guidance
states that arbitrators should ask a party requesting expungement
whether an arbitration panel or a court previously denied expungement
of the customer dispute information at issue and, if there has been a
prior denial, the arbitration panel must deny the expungement
request.\96\
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\96\ See supra note 3.
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The proposed rule change would codify the Guidance by providing
that an associated person may not file a request for expungement of
customer dispute information if (1) a panel held a hearing to consider
the merits of the associated person's expungement request for the same
customer dispute information or (2) a court of competent jurisdiction
previously denied the associated person's request to expunge the same
customer dispute information.\97\ These proposed amendments would
prevent an associated person from forum shopping, or seeking to return
to the arbitration forum administered by FINRA, to garner a favorable
outcome on his or her expungement request.\98\
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\97\ See proposed Rules 12805(a)(1)(B) and 13805(a)(2)(A). The
proposed rule change would require that the requesting party provide
information about previous expungement requests and how such
requests were decided. See, e.g., proposed Rule 12805(a)(1)(C)(ii)e.
\98\ FINRA notes that if a panel holds a hearing that addresses
the merits of an associated person's request for expungement, the
Director may deny the forum to any subsequent request by the
associated person or another party on behalf of the associated
person to expunge the same customer dispute information. See FINRA
Rules 12203(a) and 13203(a); see also proposed Rules 12203(b) and
13203(b).
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2. Limitations Applicable to Straight-In Requests Only
As discussed below, under the proposed amendments, three additional
limitations would apply to straight-in requests.
i. No Straight-In Request if a Customer Arbitration Has Not Concluded
The Guidance provides that an associated person may not file a
separate request for expungement of customer dispute information
arising from a customer arbitration until the customer arbitration has
concluded. The proposed rule change would codify and expand upon the
Guidance by providing that an associated person may not file a
straight-in request under proposed Rule 13805 if the customer
arbitration, civil litigation or customer complaint that gave rise to
the customer dispute information has not closed.\99\
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\99\ See proposed Rule 13805(a)(2)(A)(iii).
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The proposed rule change would prevent an associated person from
obtaining a decision on an expungement request while the customer
arbitration is still ongoing. This change would help ensure that a
decision in the customer arbitration is issued before the decision on
the expungement request and avoid the possibility of inconsistent
awards. The proposed amendment would also help ensure that the
arbitrators who will decide the straight-in request are able to
consider the final factual record from the customer arbitration.
ii. Time Limits Applicable to Disclosures Arising After the Effective
Date of the Proposed Rule Change
FINRA is aware that a number of expungement requests are filed many
years after a customer arbitration closes or the reporting of a
customer complaint in the CRD system.\100\ To encourage timelier filing
of expungement requests, the proposed amendments would establish time
limits for expungement requests that are specifically tied to the
closure of customer arbitrations and civil litigations, or the
reporting of customer complaints in the CRD system, as applicable.\101\
The proposed time limits should help encourage customer participation
in expungement proceedings and help ensure that straight-in requests
are brought before relevant evidence and testimony becomes stale or
unavailable.\102\
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\100\ See infra Item II.B.3.D., ``Time Limits for Straight-in
Requests--Quantitative Description.''
\101\ FINRA Rules 12206 and 13206 provide that no claim shall be
eligible for submission to arbitration where six years have elapsed
from the occurrence or event giving rise to the claim. Under these
Rules, the panel has discretion to determine if the claim, including
an expungement request, is eligible for arbitration. See supra note
14. As discussed below, if the proposed rule change is approved by
the Commission, this six-year eligibility rule would continue to
apply to requests to expunge customer dispute information that arose
prior to the effective date of the proposed rule change.
\102\ All customers from a customer arbitration or civil
litigation, and all customers who initiated a customer complaint,
would be notified of the expungement request and encouraged to
attend and provide their input. See proposed Rule 13805(b)(1)(A).
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a. Two Years From the Close of a Customer Arbitration or Civil
Litigation
Under the proposed rule change, an associated person would be
required to file a straight-in request within two years of the close of
the customer arbitration or civil litigation that gave rise to the
customer dispute information.\103\ A two-year period would provide a
reasonable amount of time for associated persons and their firms to
gather the documents, information and other resources required to file
the expungement request. In addition, the two-year period would help
ensure that the expungement hearing is held close enough in time to the
customer arbitration, when information regarding the customer
arbitration is available and in a timeframe that could increase the
[[Page 62152]]
likelihood for the customer to participate if he or she chooses to do
so. The shorter timeframe, therefore, could provide panels with more
complete factual records on which to base their expungement decisions.
At the same time, it would allow the associated person time to
determine whether to seek expungement by filing a straight-in request.
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\103\ See proposed Rule 13805(a)(2)(A)(iv).
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b. Six Years From the Date a Customer Complaint Is Reported to the CRD
System
Under the proposed rule change, an associated person would be
prohibited from filing a straight-in request to expunge a customer
complaint where more than six years has elapsed since the customer
complaint was initially reported to the CRD system and there was no
customer arbitration or civil litigation that gave rise to the customer
dispute information.\104\
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\104\ See proposed Rule 13805(a)(2)(A)(v).
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Consistent with FINRA's current eligibility rules,\105\ FINRA
believes that six years from the date a customer complaint is initially
reported to the CRD system should provide a reasonable amount of time
for the associated person to bring an expungement claim. The six-year
period would allow firms to complete their investigation of the
customer complaint and close it in the CRD system; for the complaint to
evolve, or not evolve, into an arbitration; and for the associated
person to determine whether to proceed with a request to expunge the
complaint. The proposed six-year time limit would also provide a
reasonable time limit to encourage customer participation and help
ensure the availability of evidence related to customer complaints.
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\105\ See supra note 14.
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iii. Time Limits Applicable to Disclosures Arising On or Prior to the
Effective Date of the Proposed Rule Change
If the Commission approves the proposed rule change, the proposal
would also establish time limits for requests to expunge customer
dispute information arising from customer arbitrations and civil
litigations that close, and for customer complaints that were initially
reported to the CRD system, on or prior to the effective date of the
proposed rule change.
Specifically, the proposed amendments would provide that if an
expungement request is otherwise eligible under the six-year limitation
period of FINRA Rule 13206(a), an associated person would be permitted
to file a straight-in request under the Industry Code if: (1) The
request for expungement is made within two years of the effective date
of proposed rule change, and the disclosure to be expunged arises from
a customer arbitration or civil litigation that closed on or prior to
the effective date; \106\ or (2) the request for expungement is made
within six years of the effective date of the proposed rule change, and
the disclosure to be expunged arises from a customer complaint
initially reported to the CRD system on or prior to its effective
date.\107\
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\106\ See proposed Rule 13805(a)(2)(B)(i).
\107\ See proposed Rule 13805(a)(2)(B)(ii).
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3. Director's Authority To Deny the Forum
If an associated person files an expungement request that is
ineligible for arbitration under proposed Rules 12805 and 13805, the
proposed rule change would give the Director the express authority to
deny the use of FINRA's arbitration forum to decide the request.\108\
If the expungement request is ineligible for arbitration because a
court or panel has decided previously an expungement request related to
the same customer dispute information, the Director would deny the
forum with prejudice as the request would be an attempt to receive a
second decision on a request that had been decided previously on the
merits. The Director would also deny the forum with prejudice if an
expungement request is ineligible under the proposed time limitations.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\108\ See proposed Rules 12203(b) and 13203(b). The panel would
continue to have the authority to resolve any questions regarding
eligibility of such claims under Rules 12206 and 13206, as
applicable. See supra note 14.
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If the request is ineligible because a customer arbitration that
involves the same customer dispute information is not concluded, the
Director would deny the forum without prejudice so that the associated
person could file the request (or a party could file an on-behalf-of
request) in the customer arbitration or as a straight-in request after
the customer arbitration concludes.
D. Procedural Requirements Relating to All Expungement Hearings
The Codes currently provide a list of requirements panels must
follow in order to decide an expungement request.\109\ In addition, the
Guidance provides best practices that arbitrators should follow when
deciding expungement requests. To guide further the arbitrators'
decision-making, the proposed rule change would expand the expungement
hearing requirements currently in FINRA Rules 12805 and 13805 to
incorporate the relevant provisions from the Guidance. The proposed
amendments would apply to all expungement hearings.\110\
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\109\ See supra note 24.
\110\ See proposed Rules 12805(c) and 13805(c). The proposed
procedural requirements for expungement hearings would apply to all
expungement hearings, including hearings held during a customer
arbitration or simplified arbitration (see infra Item II.A.1.(II)F.,
``Expungement Requests During Simplified Customer Arbitrations'')
that consider an expungement request, and expungement hearings
conducted by a panel from the Special Arbitrator Roster.
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1. Recorded Hearing Sessions
The Codes require a panel that is deciding an expungement request
to hold a recorded hearing session (by telephone or in person)
regarding the appropriateness of expungement.\111\ Consistent with
current practice, the proposed rule change would add the ability to
hold a recorded hearing session by video conference.\112\ Further, the
proposed rule change would clarify that a panel would not be limited in
the number of hearing sessions it should hold to decide the expungement
request.\113\
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\111\ See FINRA Rules 12805(a) and 13805(a).
\112\ See proposed Rules 12805(c)(1) and 13805(c)(1).
\113\ See supra note 112.
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2. Associated Person's Appearance
The proposed rule change would require the associated person who is
seeking expungement of the customer dispute information to appear
personally at the expungement hearing.\114\ A party requesting
expungement on behalf of an unnamed person would also be required to
appear at the hearing. The panel would determine whether an appearance
should be by telephone, in person, or by video conference.
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\114\ See proposed Rules 12805(c)(2) and 13805(c)(2). The
requirement to appear personally at the expungement hearing would
also apply to an unnamed person who seeks to have his or her
customer dispute information expunged.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
As the associated person is requesting the permanent removal of
information from his or her CRD record, FINRA believes the associated
person whose CRD record would be expunged must personally participate
in the expungement hearing to respond to questions from the panel and
those customers who choose to participate. Rather than restrict the
method of appearance, FINRA is proposing to provide the panel with the
authority to decide which method of appearance would be the most
appropriate for the particular case. FINRA believes that
[[Page 62153]]
providing flexibility as to the method of appearance would encourage
appropriate fact-finding by the arbitrators and generally strengthen
the process.
3. Customer's Participation During the Expungement Hearing
The Guidance states that it is important to allow customers and
their representatives to participate in the expungement hearing if they
wish to do so.\115\ Specifically, the Guidance provides that
arbitrators should:
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\115\ The Guidance directs arbitrators to permit customers and
their counsel to participate in the expungement hearing. See supra
note 3. FINRA Rules 12208 and 13208 permit a party to be represented
pro se, by an attorney or by a person who is not an attorney. The
proposed amendments would replace the term ``counsel'' with
``representative.'' See also Securities Arbitration--Should You Hire
an Attorney? (Jan. 3, 2019), https://www.finra.org/investors/insights/securities-arbitration.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Allow the customers and their representatives to appear at
the expungement hearing;
Allow the customer to testify (telephonically, in person,
or other method) at the expungement hearing;
Allow the representative for the customer or a pro se
customer to introduce documents and evidence at the expungement
hearing;
Allow the representative for the customer or a pro se
customer to cross-examine the broker or other witnesses called by the
party seeking expungement; and
Allow the representative for the customer or a pro se
customer to present opening and closing arguments if the panel allows
any party to present such arguments.
The proposed rule change would codify these provisions of the
Guidance. The proposed rule change would make clear that all customers
whose customer arbitrations, civil litigations and customer complaints
gave rise to the customer dispute information that is a subject of the
expungement request have a right to representation and are entitled to
appear at the expungement hearing.\116\ The proposed rule change would
provide that the customer can appear by telephone, in person, by video
conference or other means convenient to the customer and customer's
representative.\117\ By providing customers with options for how to
participate in hearings, FINRA seeks to make it easier for customers to
participate and, thereby, encourage customer participation. Customer
participation during an expungement hearing provides the panel with
important information and perspective that it might not otherwise
receive.
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\116\ See proposed Rules 12805(c)(3)(A) and 12805(c)(4); see
also proposed Rules 13805(c)(3)(A) and 13805(c)(4). The proposed
rule change would make clear that customers also have the option to
provide their position on the expungement request in writing in lieu
of attending the hearing.
\117\ See proposed Rules 12805(c)(3)(B) and 13805(c)(3)(B).
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In addition, the proposed rule change would provide that customers
must be allowed to testify at the expungement hearing and be questioned
by the customer's representative.\118\ If a customer testifies, the
associated person or a party requesting expungement on-behalf-of an
unnamed person would be allowed to cross-examine the customer.\119\
Similarly, the customer or customer's representative would be permitted
to cross-examine the associated person or party requesting expungement
on-behalf-of an unnamed person and any witnesses called by the
associated person or party requesting expungement on-behalf-of an
unnamed person during the expungement hearing.\120\ If the customer
introduces any evidence at the expungement hearing, the associated
person or party requesting expungement on-behalf-of an unnamed person
could object to the introduction of the evidence, and the panel would
decide any objections.\121\ The customer or customer's representative
would also be permitted to present opening and closing arguments if the
panel permits any party to present such arguments.\122\ FINRA believes
the proposal strikes the right balance of allowing the customer to
participate fully in the hearing and giving the associated person or
party requesting expungement on-behalf-of an unnamed person the
opportunity to substantiate arguments in support of the expungement
request.
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\118\ See proposed Rules 12805(c)(5)(A) and 13805(c)(5)(A).
\119\ See supra note 118.
\120\ See proposed Rules 12805(c)(5)(C) and 13805(c)(5)(C).
\121\ See proposed Rules 12805(c)(5)(B) and 13805(c)(5)(B).
\122\ See proposed Rules 12805(c)(5)(D) and 13805(c)(5)(D).
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4. Panel Requests for Additional Documents or Evidence
Arbitrators on the panel do not conduct their own research when
hearing an arbitration case; instead, they review the materials
provided by the parties. If they need more information, they can
request it from the parties.\123\ In deciding an expungement request,
particularly in cases that settle before an evidentiary hearing or in
cases where the customer does not participate in the expungement
hearing, the arbitrator's role as fact-finder is critical. Given this
significant role, arbitrators must ensure that they have all of the
information necessary to make a fully-informed decision on the
expungement request on the basis of a complete factual record. Thus,
the proposed rule change would codify the ability of arbitrators to
request from the associated person, or other party requesting
expungement, any documentary, testimonial or other evidence that they
deem relevant to the expungement request.\124\
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\123\ See proposed Rules 12805(c)(6) and 13805(c)(6).
\124\ See supra note 123. The Guidance also suggests that
arbitrators should ask the associated person seeking expungement or
the party seeking expungement on an associated person's behalf to
provide a current copy of the BrokerCheck report for the person
whose record would be expunged, paying particular attention to the
``Disclosure Events'' section of the report. See supra note 3. FINRA
continues to encourage arbitrators to request a current copy of the
associated person's BrokerCheck report.
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5. Review of Settlement Documents
Current FINRA Rule 12805(b) provides that, in the event the parties
from the customer arbitration settle their case, the panel considering
the expungement request must review the settlement documents and
consider the amount of payments made to any party and any other terms
and conditions of the settlement.\125\ The proposed rule change would
retain this requirement.\126\
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\125\ The panel should review all settlement documents related
to the customer dispute information the associated person is seeking
to be expunged, regardless of whether the associated person was a
party to the settlement.
\126\ See proposed Rules 12805(c)(7) and 13805(c)(7).
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In addition, the Guidance encourages arbitrators to inquire and
fully consider whether a party conditioned a settlement of the
arbitration upon agreement not to oppose the request for expungement in
cases in which the customer does not participate in the expungement
hearing or the requesting party states that a customer has indicated
that he or she will not oppose the expungement request. The proposed
rule change would codify this language in the Guidance.\127\
Conditioned settlements violate FINRA Rule 2081 and may be grounds to
deny an expungement request.\128\
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\127\ See proposed Rules 12805(c)(7) and 13805(c)(7).
\128\ FINRA Rule 2081 provides that no member firm or associated
person shall condition or seek to condition settlement of a dispute
with a customer on, or to otherwise compensate the customer for, the
customer's agreement to consent to, or not to oppose, the member's
or associated person's request to expunge such customer dispute
information from the CRD system. See also Prohibited Conditions
Relating to Expungement of Customer Dispute Information FAQ, https://www.finra.org/arbitration-mediation/faq/prohibited-conditions-relating-expungement-customer-dispute-information.
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[[Page 62154]]
6. Awards
Current FINRA Rules 12805(c) and 13805(c) require that the panel
indicate in the arbitration award which of the FINRA Rule 2080 grounds
for expungement serves as the basis for its expungement recommendation
and provide a brief written explanation of the reasons for its finding
that one or more FINRA Rule 2080 grounds for expungement applies to the
facts of the case. The proposed rule change would retain this
requirement, but would remove the word ``brief'' to indicate to the
panel that it must provide enough detail in the award to explain its
rationale for recommending expungement.\129\ As the Guidance suggests,
the explanation must be complete and not solely a recitation of one of
the FINRA Rule 2080 grounds or language provided in the expungement
request.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\129\ In addition, all awards rendered under the Codes,
including awards recommending expungement, must comply with the
requirements of FINRA Rules 12904 or 13904.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
In addition, the proposed rule change would incorporate language
from the Guidance that the panel's explanation should identify any
specific documentary, testimonial or other evidence relied on in
recommending expungement.\130\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\130\ See proposed Rules 12805(c)(8) and 13805(c)(8).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The proposed rule change would also make clarifying revisions to
FINRA Rules 12805(c) and 13805(c). The proposed amendments would
indicate that the FINRA Rule 2080 grounds that the panel must indicate
serve as the basis for the expungement order are the grounds found in
paragraph (b)(1) of FINRA Rule 2080.\131\ The proposed amendments would
also provide that the panel would ``recommend'' rather than ``grant''
expungement.\132\
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\131\ See infra note 238, and accompanying text.
\132\ The word ``recommend'' more accurately describes the
panel's role in the expungement process, consistent with FINRA's
longstanding practice to state in expungement awards that the
arbitrators ``recommend,'' rather than ``grant,'' expungement. See
supra note 10.
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7. Forum Fees
The proposed rule change would retain the current requirements in
FINRA Rules 12805(d) and 13805(d) that addresses how forum fees are
assessed in expungement hearings.\133\ Specifically, the panel must
assess against the parties requesting expungement all forum fees for
each hearing in which the sole topic is the determination of the
appropriateness of expungement.
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\133\ See proposed Rules 12805(c)(9) and 13805(c)(9).
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E. Notifications to Customers and States Regarding Expungement Requests
1. Associated Person Serves Customer With Statement of Claim
The Guidance suggests that when a straight-in request is filed
against a firm, arbitrators order the associated person to provide a
copy of the statement of claim to the customers involved in the
customer arbitration that gave rise to the customer dispute
information. This helps ensure that the customers know about the
expungement request and have an opportunity to participate in the
expungement hearing or provide a position in writing on the associated
person's request. The proposed rule change would codify this practice
in the Industry Code by requiring that the associated person provide
all customers whose customer arbitrations, civil litigations and
customer complaints gave rise to the customer dispute information that
is a subject of the expungement request with notice of the expungement
request by serving a copy of the statement of claim requesting
expungement.\134\ The panel would be authorized to decide whether
extraordinary circumstances exist that make service on the customers
impracticable.\135\
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\134\ See proposed Rule 13805(b)(1)(A). The associated person
would be required to notify the customer before the first scheduled
hearing session is held so that the customer would be aware of the
expungement request in advance and could plan to participate once he
or she is notified of the time and place of the hearing. See FINRA
Rule 13100(p) (providing that a hearing session could be a hearing
or prehearing conference).
\135\ See proposed Rule 13805(b)(1)(A).
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Given the associated person's personal interest in obtaining
expungement, FINRA believes that the panel should review all documents
that the associated person used to inform the customers about the
expungement request as well as any customer responses received.
Accordingly, the proposed amendments would require the associated
person to file with the panel all documents provided by the associated
person to the customers, including proof of service, and any responses
received by the associated person from a customer.\136\ The proposed
requirement would help ensure that the associated person does not
attempt to dissuade a customer from participating in the expungement
hearing.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\136\ See proposed Rule 13805(b)(1)(C).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
2. Notification to Customers of Expungement Hearing
To help ensure that the customer is notified about the expungement
hearing, the proposed rule change would provide that the Director shall
notify all customers whose customer arbitrations, civil litigations and
customer complaints gave rise to the customer dispute information that
is a subject of the expungement request, of the time, date and place of
the expungement hearing using the customer's current address provided
by the party seeking expungement.\137\ The associated person would be
required to provide a current address for the customer, or the
expungement request would be considered deficient and would not be
served.
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\137\ See proposed Rule 13805(b)(2). This requirement would
apply to straight-in requests filed under the Industry Code; notice
to customers would not be necessary for requests filed under
proposed Rule 12805 of the Customer Code as the customer would be a
named party.
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3. State Notification of Expungement Requests
The proposed rule change would require FINRA to notify state
securities regulators, in the manner determined by FINRA, of an
expungement request within 30 days after receiving a complete request
for expungement.\138\ The proposed amendments would help ensure that
state securities regulators are timely notified of the expungement
requests.\139\
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\138\ See proposed Rules 12805(b) and 13805(b)(3).
\139\ FINRA would make this notification in connection with
expungement requests under the Customer and Industry Codes. Such
notification could be achieved by notifying NASAA of the expungement
requests.
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F. Expungement Requests During Simplified Customer Arbitrations
Customer arbitrations involving $50,000 or less, called simplified
arbitrations, are governed by FINRA Rule 12800. FINRA Rule 12800
provides customers with expedited procedures to make the FINRA forum
economically feasible for these smaller claims. Simplified arbitrations
are decided on the pleadings and other materials submitted by the
parties, unless the customer requests a hearing.\140\ Further, a single
arbitrator from the chairperson roster is appointed to consider and
decide simplified arbitrations, unless the parties agree in writing
otherwise.\141\
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\140\ See FINRA Rule 12800(a).
\141\ See FINRA Rule 12800(b). The parties could agree to have a
three-person panel decide the simplified case. For ease of
reference, when discussing expungement requests in simplified
arbitrations under the proposed rule change, the rule filing uses
the term ``arbitrator,'' unless otherwise specified, to mean either
a panel or single arbitrator.
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[[Page 62155]]
The customer who files a simplified arbitration determines how the
claim will be decided. In particular, the customer has the option of
having the case decided in one of three ways: (1) Without a hearing
(referred to as ``on the papers''), where the arbitrator decides the
case on the pleadings or other materials; (2) in an ``Option One'' full
hearing, in which prehearings and hearings on the merits take place
pursuant to the regular provisions of the Code; or (3) in an ``Option
Two'' special proceeding, whereby the parties present their case in a
hearing to the arbitrator in a compressed timeframe, so that the
hearings last no longer than one day.\142\
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\142\ See FINRA Rule 12800(c).
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Currently, named associated persons and parties requesting
expungement on-behalf-of unnamed persons request expungement during
simplified arbitrations. FINRA Rule 12800 does not, however, expressly
address how an expungement request should be filed or considered during
a simplified arbitration. The proposed amendments would codify an
associated person's ability to request expungement when named as a
respondent in a simplified arbitration, and for other parties to
request expungement on-behalf-of an unnamed person. The proposed rule
change would also establish procedures for requesting and considering
expungement requests in simplified arbitrations that are consistent
with the expedited nature of these proceedings.\143\
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\143\ Under the proposed rule change, an associated person would
not be permitted to request expungement in a simplified arbitration
administered under the Industry Code, FINRA Rule 13800. All
expungement requests under the Industry Code must be filed in
accordance with proposed Rule 13805.
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1. Requesting Expungement
The proposed rule change would permit a named associated person to
request expungement, or a party to file an on-behalf-of request, during
a simplified arbitration. Unlike in a non-simplified arbitration, if
expungement is not requested during the simplified arbitration, the
associated person would be permitted to request it as a straight-in
request filed under the Industry Code.\144\
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\144\ See infra Item II.A.1.(II)F.1.c., ``When No Expungement
Request is Made in a Simplified Arbitration.''
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
a. By a Named Associated Person During the Simplified Arbitration
Under the proposed rule change, an associated person named as a
respondent in a simplified arbitration could request expungement during
the arbitration of the customer dispute information arising from the
customer's statement of claim, provided the request is eligible for
arbitration.\145\
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\145\ See proposed Rule 12800(d)(1)(A). The limitations that
apply to expungement requests filed by a named associated person
under proposed Rule 12805(a)(1)(B) would apply to these requests.
See supra Item II.A.1.(II)C., ``Limitations on Expungement
Requests.''
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If a named associated person requests expungement during a
simplified arbitration, the proposed rule change would require the
request to be filed in an answer or pleading requesting expungement and
include the same information required as a request filed in a non-
simplified arbitration.\146\ Because of the expedited nature of
simplified arbitrations, if the named associated person requests
expungement in a pleading other than answer, the request must be filed
within 30 days after the date that FINRA notifies the associated person
of arbitrator appointment,\147\ which is the last deadline provided to
the parties in a simplified arbitration to submit any additional
documents before the case is submitted to the arbitrator.\148\
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\146\ See proposed Rules 12800(d)(1)(B)(i) and
12805(a)(1)(C)(ii). Thus, the associated person's expungement
request would be required to contain the applicable filing fee; the
CRD number of the party requesting expungement; each CRD occurrence
number that is the subject of the request; the case name and docket
number that gave rise to the disclosure, if applicable; and an
explanation of whether expungement of the same customer dispute
information was previously requested and, if so, how it was decided.
\147\ FINRA would notify state securities regulators, in the
manner determined by FINRA, of an expungement request within 30 days
after receiving a complete expungement request. See proposed Rule
12800(f)(1).
\148\ FINRA notifies the parties when an arbitrator has been
appointed. FINRA informs the parties that they have 30 days from the
date of notification to submit additional documents or other
information before the case is submitted to the arbitrator.
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To limit arbitrator shopping, the arbitrator would be required to
decide an expungement request once it is filed by the associated
person.\149\ If an associated person withdraws or does not pursue the
request after filing, the arbitrator would be required to deny the
request with prejudice so that it could not be re-filed.\150\
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\149\ See proposed Rule 12800(e)(1).
\150\ See proposed Rule 12800(d)(1)(C).
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b. By a Party On-Behalf-Of an Unnamed Person
Under the proposed amendments, the requirements for a party to file
an on-behalf-of request during a simplified arbitration would be the
same as the requirements for a named associated person filing an
expungement request during a simplified arbitration, with one
distinction. A named party would only be able to file an on-behalf-of
request during a simplified arbitration with the consent of the unnamed
person. As with on-behalf-of requests filed in customer arbitrations
under proposed Rule 12805(a)(2), the unnamed person who would benefit
from the expungement request must consent to such filing by signing the
Form.\151\
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\151\ See proposed Rule 12800(d)(2). The request must also meet
the same requirements as an on-behalf-of request filed under
proposed Rule 12805(a)(2). See proposed Rules 12805(a)(1)(C)(ii),
12805(a)(2)(C)(ii) and 12805(a)(2)(D); see also supra Items
II.A.1.(II)A.1.b., ``Expungement Requests By a Party Named in the
Customer Arbitration On-Behalf-Of an Unnamed Person.''
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c. When No Expungement Request Is Made in a Simplified Arbitration
If expungement is not requested during the simplified arbitration
under proposed Rule 12800(d), the associated person would be able to
file a straight-in request under proposed Rule 13805 and have the
request decided by a three-person panel randomly selected from the
Special Arbitrator Roster.\152\ The request would be subject to the
limitations on whether and when such requests may be filed under the
Industry Code.\153\
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\152\ See proposed Rules 12800(e)(2), 13805 and 13806.
\153\ See proposed Rule 13805(a)(2); see also supra Item
II.A.1.(II)C., ``Limitations on Expungement Requests.''
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Due to the expedited nature of simplified proceedings, FINRA
believes that the associated person should be able to seek expungement
separately under the Industry Code and have his or her expungement
request decided by a panel randomly selected from the Special
Arbitrator Roster. In simplified arbitrations, there may be less
discovery, and the customer may dictate the extent of the evidence
presented to the arbitrator. The customer may, for example, determine
to have the arbitration decided on the papers. Because there may be
less information available for the arbitrator to evaluate an
expungement request during a simplified arbitration--even when the
simplified arbitration results in an award--the associated person would
retain the ability to choose to file the request as a straight-in
request under the Industry Code.
2. Deciding Expungement Requests During Simplified Arbitrations
If a named associated person or party on-behalf-of an unnamed
person requests expungement during a simplified arbitration, the
arbitrator would be required to decide the expungement request,
regardless of how
[[Page 62156]]
the simplified arbitration case closes (e.g., even if the case
settles).\154\
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\154\ See proposed Rule 12800(e)(1).
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Under the proposed rule change, how and when the expungement
request is decided would depend on which option the customer selects to
decide the simplified arbitration.
a. No Hearing or Option Two Special Proceeding
If the customer opts not to have a hearing or chooses an Option Two
special proceeding, the arbitrator would decide the customer's dispute
first and issue an award.\155\ After the customer's dispute is decided,
the arbitrator must hold a separate expungement-only hearing to
consider and decide the expungement request and issue a separate
award.\156\
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\155\ See proposed FINRA Rule 12800(e)(1)(A).
\156\ See supra note 155. The arbitrator must conduct the
expungement hearing pursuant to proposed Rule 12805(c). The
expungement award must meet the requirements of proposed Rule
12805(c)(8), and forum fees would be assessed pursuant to proposed
Rule 12805(c)(9).
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The arbitrator would decide the customer's dispute first and issue
an award to minimize any delays in resolving the customer arbitration
and any delays in potential recovery that a customer may be awarded.
Further, because the customer arbitration may not be as fully developed
when an ``on the papers'' or special proceeding is requested, the
arbitrator must hold a separate expungement-only hearing to ensure that
he or she has access to sufficient evidence to make a fully-informed
decision on the expungement request. The Director would notify all
customers whose simplified customer arbitrations and customer
complaints gave rise to the customer dispute information that is a
subject of the expungement request, of the time, date and place of the
expungement hearing.\157\
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\157\ See proposed Rule 12800(f)(2). The Director would also
notify these customers of the expungement hearing, if the associated
person opts to file the request under the Industry Code after the
simplified case closes.
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b. Option One Hearing
If the customer chooses to have a full ``Option One'' hearing on
his or her claim and it closes by award, the arbitrator would be
required to consider and decide the expungement request during the
customer arbitration and include the decision in the award.\158\ This
process would be the same as deciding an expungement request during a
non-simplified customer arbitration that closes by award after a
hearing, where the customer's claim and expungement request are
addressed during the customer arbitration. As there would be a more
complete factual record from the full hearing on the merits of the
customer case, the arbitrator could decide the customer dispute and the
expungement request after the hearing concludes.
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\158\ See proposed Rule 12800(e)(1)(B)(i).
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If the customer arbitration closes other than by award or by award
without a hearing, the arbitrator would be required to hold a separate
expungement-only hearing to consider and decide the expungement request
and issue the decision in an award.\159\ The arbitrator would need to
conduct a separate expungement hearing to develop a complete factual
record in order to make a fully-informed decision on the expungement
request.\160\
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\159\ See proposed Rule 12800(e)(1)(B)(ii).
\160\ See supra note 156.
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Given the generally less complex nature of simplified arbitrations,
FINRA does not believe that it is necessary for a panel from the
Special Arbitrator Roster to decide an expungement request if a
simplified customer arbitration closes other than by award or by award
without a hearing. However, if the Commission approves the proposed
rule change, FINRA will continue to monitor expungement requests and
decisions in simplified arbitrations to determine if such requests
should be decided by the Special Arbitrator Roster, particularly if the
customer chooses to have his or her case decided on the papers or in a
special proceeding.
G. Non-Substantive Changes
FINRA is also proposing to amend the Codes to make non-substantive,
technical changes to the rules impacted by the proposed rule change.
For example, the proposed rule change would require the renumbering of
paragraphs and the updating of cross-references in the rules impacted
by the proposed rule change. In addition, the title of Part VIII of the
Customer Code would be amended to add a reference to ``Expungement''
proceedings. Similarly, the title of Part VIII of the Industry Code
would be amended to add a reference to ``Expungement Proceedings'' and
``Promissory Note Proceedings.'' FINRA believes the proposed changes to
the titles would more accurately reflect the contents of Part VIII of
the Customer and Industry Codes. FINRA is also proposing to re-number
current FINRA Rule 13806 (Promissory Note Proceedings) as new FINRA
Rule 13807, without substantive change to the current rule language.
If the Commission approves the proposed rule change, FINRA will
announce the effective date of the proposed rule change in a Regulatory
Notice to be published no later than 60 days following Commission
approval. The effective date will be no later than 120 days following
publication of the Regulatory Notice announcing Commission approval of
the proposed rule change.
2. Statutory Basis
FINRA believes that the proposed rule change is consistent with the
provisions of Section 15A(b)(6) of the Act,\161\ which requires, among
other things, that FINRA rules must be designed to prevent fraudulent
and manipulative acts and practices, to promote just and equitable
principles of trade, and, in general, to protect investors and the
public interest.
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\161\ 15 U.S.C. 78o-3(b)(6).
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The proposed rule change seeks to balance the important investor
protection objectives of maintaining the integrity and accuracy of the
information in the CRD system and BrokerCheck with the interest of
brokers and firms in the fairness and accuracy of the disclosures
contained in the systems.
The proposed rule change will enhance the current expungement
framework and improve the efficiency of the FINRA arbitration forum by
codifying the Guidance as rules that arbitrators and parties must
follow. In addition, when an associated person files a claim against a
firm for the sole purpose of requesting expungement, these cases can be
complex to resolve, particularly if the customer or customer's
representative does not participate in the hearing. Having three
arbitrators available to ask questions, request evidence and generally
to serve as fact-finders in the absence of customer input will help
ensure that a complete factual record is created to support the
arbitrators' decision in such expungement hearings. In addition, the
proposed rule change will help ensure that arbitrators who will decide
these requests meet heightened qualifications and have completed
enhanced expungement training. FINRA believes that by requiring a
three-person panel from the Special Arbitrator Roster to decide
expungement requests filed under the Industry Code, the proposed rule
change will help ensure expungement is recommended in limited
circumstances.
The proposed rule change will foreclose a practice that has emerged
in the existing expungement process where parties seek expungement
after a prior denial by a court or panel of a request
[[Page 62157]]
to expunge the same customer dispute information, or where parties
withdraw or do not pursue an expungement request and then make another
request for expungement of the same customer dispute information. The
proposed rule change imposes procedures and requirements around when
and how a party may request expungement, and expressly provides that
omission of certain of the requirements will make the expungement
request deficient. Further, the proposed rule change provides the
Director with express authority to deny the forum if an expungement
request is ineligible for arbitration under the proposed rules. Thus,
FINRA believes the proposed rule change will add more transparency to
the expungement process.
Moreover, the proposed rule change seeks to protect investors and
the public interest by notifying customers of expungement requests
filed under the Industry Code. Although a straight-in request will be
filed against a firm, customers whose disputes are a subject of the
request will be notified and encouraged to participate in the
expungement hearing. Such notifications will make clear to arbitrators
and parties the rights of customers who choose to participate in these
hearings. The customers' input will provide the panel with additional
insight on the customer dispute and help create a complete factual
record, which will result in more informed decisions on expungement
requests. FINRA believes this enhancement, which will encourage and
facilitate customer participation in expungement hearings, will help to
maintain the integrity of the information in the CRD system.
Further, the process of requesting expungement during a simplified
arbitration will be codified to help ensure that customers are aware of
their rights under the process and how an expungement request will
affect (and not affect) their arbitration claims. By expressly
incorporating the practice of requesting expungement during simplified
proceedings, the proposed amendments add consistency to the rules and
provide more guidance to the arbitrators and the parties requesting
expungement.
The proposed rule change will also help ensure that state
securities regulators have knowledge of expungement requests by
requiring notification to the states, in the manner determined by
FINRA, after FINRA receives a complete expungement request.
For these reasons, the proposed rule change represents a
significant step towards addressing concerns with the current
expungement framework. FINRA believes the proposed rule change will
improve the expungement framework by incorporating the Guidance,
establishing a Special Arbitrator Roster and addressing gaps that have
emerged in the existing expungement framework. In addition, FINRA
believes these changes will help to maintain the accuracy and integrity
of the information in the CRD system and BrokerCheck, while also
protecting brokers from the publication of false allegations against
them.
B. Self-Regulatory Organization's Statement on Burden on Competition
FINRA does not believe that the proposed rule change will result in
any burden on competition that is not necessary or appropriate in
furtherance of the purposes of the Act.
Economic Impact Assessment
FINRA has undertaken an economic impact assessment to analyze the
regulatory need for the proposed rule change, its potential economic
impacts, including anticipated costs, benefits and distributional and
competitive effects, relative to the current baseline, and the
alternatives FINRA considered in assessing how best to meet FINRA's
regulatory objectives.
1. Regulatory Need
The proposed rule change would address concerns relating to the
expungement process that are not consistent with the regulatory intent
to permit expungement in limited circumstances. The concerns include
the potential impact of the absence of customers and their
representatives from an expungement hearing which may result in the
arbitrator or panel receiving information only from the associated
person. The concerns also include associated persons having their
straight-in requests heard by a single arbitrator instead of a three-
person panel, and the selection of arbitrators to hear these requests.
Lastly, the concerns include requests to expunge the same customer
dispute information in multiple proceedings. The proposed rule change
would also codify and expand upon the provisions of the Guidance to
help ensure that arbitrators and parties are adhering to these
procedures for all expungement requests, and to encourage and
facilitate customer participation in expungement hearings.
2. Economic Baseline
The economic baseline for the proposed rule change includes the
current provisions under the Codes that address the process for parties
to seek expungement relief. In addition, because arbitrators are
generally believed to be adhering to the best practices and
recommendations that are a part of the Guidance, the economic baseline
also includes the Guidance.\162\ The proposed rule change is expected
to affect associated persons and other parties to expungement requests
including member firms, customers and arbitrators. The proposed rule
change may also affect users of customer dispute information contained
in the CRD system and displayed through BrokerCheck.\163\
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\162\ See supra note 3.
\163\ Users of customer dispute information include investors;
member firms and other companies in the financial services industry;
individuals registered as brokers or seeking employment in the
brokerage industry; and FINRA, states and other regulators.
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The customer dispute information contained in the CRD system is
submitted by registered securities firms and regulatory authorities in
response to questions on the uniform registration forms.\164\ The
information can be valuable to current and prospective customers to
learn about the conduct of associated persons.\165\ Current and
prospective customers may not select or remain with an associated
person or a member firm that employs an associated person with a record
of customer disputes. Similarly, member firms and other companies in
the financial services industry may use the information when making
employment decisions.\166\ In this manner, the customer dispute
information contained in the CRD system (and displayed through
BrokerCheck) may positively or negatively affect the business and
professional opportunities of associated persons. Where the information
is reliable, it also provides for customer
[[Page 62158]]
protections and information useful for member firms.
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\164\ See supra note 5 and accompanying text for additional
discussion of the uniform registration forms and the information
contained in the CRD system. Some of the information may involve
pending actions or allegations that have not been resolved or
proven.
\165\ Recent academic studies provide evidence that the past
disciplinary and other regulatory events associated with a firm or
individual can be predictive of similar future events. See Hammad
Qureshi & Jonathan Sokobin, Do Investors Have Valuable Information
About Brokers? FINRA Office of the Chief Economist Working Paper,
Aug. 2015; see also Mark Egan, Gregor Matvos, & Amit Seru, The
Market for Financial Adviser Misconduct, Journal of Political
Economy 127, no. 1 (February 2019): 233-295.
\166\ Customer dispute information submitted to the CRD system
and displayed through BrokerCheck may have other uses. For example,
investors may use the information when deciding with whom to do
business. FINRA, states and other regulators also use the
information to regulate brokers.
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Any negative impact on the business and professional opportunities
of associated persons may be appropriate and consistent with investor
protection, such as when the customer dispute information has merit.
Any such negative impact may be inappropriate, however, if, for
example, the customer dispute information is factually impossible,
clearly erroneous, or false. Regardless of the merit, associated
persons have an incentive to remove customer dispute information from
the CRD system and its public display through BrokerCheck.
An associated person, or a party on-behalf-of an unnamed person,
typically begins the process to remove customer dispute information
from the CRD system by filing an expungement request in FINRA
arbitration. FINRA is able to identify 6,928 requests to expunge
customer dispute information in FINRA arbitration from January 2016
through December 2019 (the ``sample period''). More than one
expungement request can be made in a single arbitration, and multiple
expungement requests may relate to the same arbitration, civil
litigation or complaint if the dispute relates to more than one
associated person.
Among the 6,928 expungement requests, 3,203 requests (46 percent)
were made during a customer arbitration, and 3,725 requests (54
percent) were filed as a straight-in request.\167\ The 3,203
expungement requests made during a customer arbitration include 2,936
requests made during a non-simplified customer arbitration and 267
requests made during a simplified customer arbitration. The 3,725
requests to expunge customer dispute information disclosures filed as a
straight-in request include 3,657 requests in arbitrations filed solely
against a member firm or against a member firm and a customer, and 68
requests in arbitrations filed solely against a customer. In the 3,203
expungement requests made during a customer arbitration, the associated
person was a named party in 1,504 of the requests (47 percent), and an
unnamed party in 1,699 of the requests (53 percent).
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\167\ Sixteen requests to expunge customer dispute information
were made during industry arbitrations that were not straight-in
requests. To simplify the analysis, we exclude these 16 requests
from the sample.
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Among the expungement requests during the sample period, FINRA is
able to identify 82 requests to expunge the same customer dispute
information in a subsequent arbitration.\168\ For purposes of this
analysis, FINRA limited the identification of additional expungement
requests to those requests where both the initial request and the
subsequent request were made during the sample period. Additional
subsequent expungement requests may have been filed during the sample
period if the initial expungement request was made prior to the sample
period (i.e., before January 2016). The 82 requests to expunge the same
customer dispute information in a subsequent arbitration can,
therefore, be considered a lower bound for the number of these requests
during the sample period. The proposed rule change would foreclose
associated persons from filing additional requests.
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\168\ Eighty of the 82 subsequent expungement requests relate to
previous requests in another arbitration that were withdrawn or
otherwise not pursued by the associated person or party that filed
the request. For the two remaining subsequent expungement requests,
one relates to a previous request on behalf of an unnamed person
that was denied, and the other to a previous request that was
determined by the panel to be ineligible for arbitration. An
arbitrator or panel recommended expungement in 60 of the 82
subsequent expungement requests and denied eight. One of the granted
requests relates to the previous request that was denied. Another of
the granted requests relates to the previous request that was
deficient and therefore not decided. Seven subsequent expungement
requests were withdrawn or deficient and, therefore, not decided. In
addition, seven subsequent expungement requests were still pending
as of the end of the sample period. In 42 of the 82 subsequent
expungement requests, the associated person was an unnamed party in
the first arbitration.
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As of December 2019, 5,159 of the 6,928 expungement requests were
made in an arbitration that closed. Among the 5,159 expungement
requests, 2,255 requests (44 percent) were made during a customer
arbitration and 2,904 requests (56 percent) were filed as a straight-in
request. The 2,255 expungement requests made during a customer
arbitration include 2,015 requests made during a non-simplified
customer arbitration and 240 requests made during a simplified customer
arbitration. The 2,904 requests filed as a straight-in request include
2,838 requests in arbitrations filed solely against a member firm or a
member firm and a customer, and 66 requests in arbitrations filed
solely against a customer. Under the proposed rule change, an
associated person would be prohibited from filing a straight-in request
against a customer.
An arbitrator or panel made a decision in arbitrations relating to
3,722 of the 5,159 requests in arbitrations that closed, and made no
decision in arbitrations relating to the remaining 1,437 requests. A
single arbitrator made a decision in arbitrations relating to 2,692 of
the 3,722 requests, and a two- or three-person panel made a decision in
arbitrations relating to the remaining 1,030 requests. For the customer
arbitrations, the decision by an arbitrator or panel may relate to the
arbitration, an expungement request, or both. For the straight-in
requests, the decision would relate to the expungement request only. In
arbitrations where no decision on the merits of the customer case or an
expungement request was made, the requests were either not eligible (as
determined by the arbitrator or panel), withdrawn, or otherwise not
pursued by the associated person or party that filed the request.
As detailed in the next paragraph, the percentage of expungement
requests that are recommended is higher when the arbitrator or panel
receives information only from the associated person or other party
requesting expungement. The arbitrator or panel is likely to receive
information only from the party requesting expungement when (1) the
customer arbitration does not close by award after a hearing (e.g.,
settles), or (2) an associated person files a straight-in request
against a member firm. In both circumstances, the customer and his or
her representative have little incentive to participate in an
expungement hearing.
Among the 3,722 expungement requests in arbitrations where an
arbitrator or panel made a decision, 2,874 resulted in an arbitrator or
panel recommending expungement (77 percent). Among the 3,722
expungement requests, 976 requests were made during a non-simplified or
simplified customer arbitration, and 2,746 requests were filed as a
straight-in request. An arbitrator or panel recommended expungement in
response to 595 of the 976 requests (61 percent) made during a customer
arbitration. This includes 168 of the 369 requests (46 percent) made
during a customer arbitration that closed by award after a hearing, and
427 of the 607 expungement requests (70 percent) made during a customer
arbitration that closed by award without a hearing or other than by
award. An arbitrator or panel recommended expungement in 2,279 of the
2,746 requests filed as a straight-in request (83 percent).\169\
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\169\ Among the 976 expungement requests during a non-simplified
or simplified customer arbitration, a single arbitrator made a
decision in arbitrations relating to 306 requests, and a two- or
three-person panel made a decision in arbitrations relating to 670
requests. In addition, among the 2,746 straight-in requests, a
single arbitrator made a decision in arbitrations relating to 2,386
requests and a two- or three-person panel made a decision in
arbitrations relating to 360 requests. See infra note 190 for a
discussion of the percentage of expungement requests recommended
between two- or three-person panels and one-person panels.
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[[Page 62159]]
A recommendation for expungement in FINRA arbitration is not the
final step in the expungement process. If the arbitrator or panel
recommends expungement, then the firm or associated person must confirm
the arbitration award in a court of competent jurisdiction and serve
the confirmed award on FINRA.\170\ As of July 2020, FINRA had removed
2,641 customer dispute information disclosures from the CRD system from
the possible 2,874 requests (92 percent) in which an arbitrator or
panel recommended expungement. Firms or associated persons may have not
yet sought or obtained a court order for the remaining disputes.
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\170\ See supra note 10.
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Approximately one-third of the 2,641 customer dispute information
disclosures (965, or 37 percent) that were expunged were submitted to
the CRD system from 2014 to 2019. The 965 customer dispute information
disclosures reflect three percent of the total number of customer
dispute information disclosures submitted to the CRD system during this
period of time (approximately 37,000). The remaining 1,676 customer
dispute information disclosures were submitted to the CRD system prior
to 2014. The number of customer dispute information disclosures
expunged during the sample period that were submitted to the CRD system
prior to 2014 suggests that associated persons may yet still expunge
customer dispute information disclosures submitted to the CRD system
during or prior to the sample period. The three percent of expunged
customer dispute information disclosures should therefore be considered
a lower bound for the rate at which customer dispute information
disclosures are expunged.
A firm or associated person can also initiate a proceeding directly
in a court of competent jurisdiction without first going through any
arbitration proceeding. From January 2016 through December 2019, the
expungement of 138 customer dispute information disclosures were sought
directly in court. As of July 2020, court proceedings had concluded for
118 of those disclosures and proceedings remained ongoing for 20
disclosures. Among the 118 disclosures for which the court proceeding
had concluded, 86 disclosures were ordered expunged by a court and 32
disclosures were not ordered to be expunged. FINRA will challenge these
requests in court in appropriate circumstances.
3. Economic Impact
A. Overview
The proposed rule change would codify the best practices described
in the Guidance.\171\ The best practices include the prohibition on the
filing of an expungement request if (1) an arbitration panel or court
of competent jurisdiction previously denied a request to expunge the
same customer dispute information, or (2) the customer dispute
information arises from a customer's arbitration that has not
concluded. Based on FINRA staff observations, arbitrators are generally
believed to be adhering to these best practices and, therefore,
codifying them should not result in new material economic impacts.
Codifying the best practices in the Guidance should, however, clarify
among parties how the practices should be applied, including what is
permitted during the expungement hearing and the responsibilities of
the parties and the arbitrator or panel when expungement is requested.
Codifying the Guidance may also help inform customers more generally of
the practices that the forum has implemented to encourage and
facilitate customer participation in expungement hearings. In addition,
parties may incur fewer costs from the codification of the practices,
including the costs from actions or decisions (e.g., requesting
expungement of customer dispute information that was previously denied
in another arbitration or court) that would be denied by an arbitration
panel pursuant to the Guidance.
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\171\ See supra note 3.
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The proposed rule change would also introduce other changes to the
Codes that expand upon or that are not a part of the Guidance. In
particular, the proposed rule change would restrict when an associated
person is permitted to request expungement in FINRA arbitration. The
proposed rule change would also require an arbitrator or panel from a
customer arbitration that closes by award after a hearing, from a
simplified customer arbitration, or a panel from the Special Arbitrator
Roster to decide an expungement request. Finally, the proposed rule
change would address the participation by associated persons and
customers in expungement hearings. These changes may result in new
material economic benefits and costs. These economic effects are
discussed in further detail below.
B. Expungement Requests During Customer Arbitrations
The proposed rule change would set forth requirements for
expungement requests during customer arbitrations. The proposed rule
change would establish different requirements for non-simplified
customer arbitrations and simplified customer arbitrations, and for an
associated person named or unnamed to a (non-simplified or simplified)
customer arbitration.
i. Expungement Requests by Named Associated Persons During Non-
Simplified Customer Arbitrations
The proposed rule change would require an associated person named
in a non-simplified customer arbitration to request expungement during
the customer arbitration regarding the conduct that gave rise to the
arbitration. Otherwise, the associated person would forfeit the
opportunity to seek expungement of the same customer dispute
information in any subsequent proceeding. The arbitrator or panel from
a non-simplified customer arbitration would decide an expungement
request if the arbitration closes by award after a hearing.\172\
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\172\ See supra Item II.A.1.(II)A.1.a., ``Expungement Requests
During the Customer Arbitration, By a Respondent Named in a Customer
Arbitration.''
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The proposed rule change would help ensure that, if possible, the
arbitrator or panel from a non-simplified customer arbitration, with
input from all parties and access to all evidence, testimony and other
documents, would decide an expungement request. These arbitrators or
panels would be best situated to decide the related issue of
expungement, and thereby help ensure that expungement recommendations
and the customer dispute information contained in the CRD system and
displayed through BrokerCheck reflect the conduct of associated
persons.
An associated person named in a non-simplified customer arbitration
may lose the ability to request expungement of the customer dispute
information arising from the arbitration. A named associated person who
does not request expungement during a non-simplified customer
arbitration (or within the required time) would lose the ability to
seek expungement relief.\173\ Because the named associated person may
lose the ability to assess information that arises as a part of
arbitration before they are required to request expungement,
[[Page 62160]]
associated persons may incur costs to preserve their right to request
expungement by filing a request with or without the expectation that
the arbitrator or panel would recommend expungement. FINRA believes,
however, that the proposed rule change would mitigate these potential
costs by providing associated persons a reasonable amount of time
(i.e., within 45 days of receipt of the customer's statement of claim
if the request is included in an answer, or 30 days before the first
scheduled hearing begins if the request is included in a pleading)
during the arbitration to consider whether to file a request. Parties
may also incur other, indirect costs if, for example, the deadline to
request expungement during a non-simplified customer arbitration causes
them to incur costs to expedite the filing of the expungement request
or constrains their ability to engage in other activities (i.e., incur
opportunity costs).
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\173\ Under the proposed rule change, a party that does not file
or serve an expungement request at least 30 days before the first
scheduled hearing begins could file a motion seeking an extension.
The motion, however, may be opposed by another party and denied.
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ii. Expungement Requests During a Non-Simplified Customer Arbitration
That Close Other Than by Award or by Award Without a Hearing
Associated persons who request expungement during a non-simplified
customer arbitration (either as a named party or as an unnamed party
that consents to an on-behalf-of request) that closes other than by
award or by award without a hearing (and would have otherwise had their
expungement request decided as part of the customer arbitration) would
incur additional costs to file a straight-in request.\174\ Associated
persons may incur delays in receiving a decision on the request, and
may incur additional legal fees and forum fees to resolve the straight-
in request. The member firms with which the associated persons were
associated at the time the customer dispute arose would also incur
additional legal and forum fees. These costs would be imposed by the
proposed rule change if the expungement requests would have otherwise
been decided as part of the non-simplified customer arbitration. These
costs would not be imposed by the proposed rule change, however, if
regardless of the proposed rule change associated persons would have
filed a straight-in request after the close of the non-simplified
customer arbitration.
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\174\ Associated persons who would otherwise request expungement
as a counterclaim during an industry arbitration, which is rare, or
who would otherwise intervene in a customer arbitration and have an
expungement request decided during the arbitration, would instead be
required to file a straight-in request under proposed Rule 13805.
These associated persons and member firms with which the associated
persons were associated would incur similar costs.
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The additional costs for an associated person to resolve a
straight-in request after the close of a non-simplified customer
arbitration (that closes other than by award or by award without a
hearing) may reduce the likelihood that the parties settle a customer
arbitration.\175\ In particular, the associated person may factor the
cost to resolve a separate straight-in request into the decision
regarding whether to settle the arbitration or have the case decided by
the arbitrator or panel to the arbitration. In addition, even if the
parties continue to settle the dispute, the associated person may
subtract the cost to resolve a separate straight-in request from the
potential settlement amount.
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\175\ FINRA notes, however, that the determination regarding
whether to settle a customer arbitration can depend on a number of
factors, including the parties' respective estimates of the
additional costs they would incur to continue the customer
arbitration, the value that the associated person places on
expungement, the associated person's estimate of the likelihood that
he or she could obtain expungement in the customer case compared to
in a straight-in request and the cost that they estimate the
associated person would incur to pursue the straight-in request.
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An associated person (or a party on behalf of an associated person)
who files a straight-in request would incur the minimum hearing session
fee of $1,125 for each session the panel conducts to decide the
expungement request.\176\ The member firm at which the broker was
associated at the time the customer dispute arose would also be
assessed a minimum surcharge fee of $1,900 and a minimum process fee of
$3,750. The fees associated with non-monetary claims would help ensure
that costs to the forum for administering expungement requests are
allocated as intended to the party or parties requesting expungement
and, as applicable, the member firms at which the broker was associated
at the time the customer dispute arose.
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\176\ The associated person would not, however, incur an
additional filing fee to file the straight-in expungement request.
See infra Item II.C.8.
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iii. Expungement Requests by Unnamed Persons in Non-Simplified Customer
Arbitrations and by Named and Unnamed Persons in Simplified Customer
Arbitrations
The proposed rule change would not require an unnamed person in a
non-simplified customer arbitration, an associated person named in a
simplified customer arbitration, or an unnamed person in a simplified
customer arbitration to request expungement of the customer dispute
information during the customer arbitration. Instead, similar to today,
these associated persons may wait until after the customer arbitration
has concluded to request expungement as a straight-in request.\177\
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\177\ This requirement would help ensure that the panel from the
Special Arbitrator Roster is aware of the outcome of the arbitration
when deciding the request.
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The option to wait until after the customer arbitration has
concluded to request expungement is not a benefit created by the
proposed rule change, but is instead currently permitted under the
Codes. FINRA believes that an associated person who is not named in a
non-simplified customer arbitration, or an associated person who is
either named or not named in a simplified customer arbitration, should
be able to seek expungement as a straight-in request and have their
request decided by a panel from the Special Arbitrator Roster.
Associated persons who are not required and choose not to request
expungement during the customer arbitration may also incur additional
costs. Any incremental costs from not filing an expungement request
during a customer arbitration, however, are not imposed by the proposed
rule change. Instead, they are borne at the discretion of the parties
who make the determination of when to request expungement, and are
similar to the costs they would incur under the Codes today.
iv. Time Limit for Requesting Expungement in Simplified and Non-
Simplified Customer Arbitrations
A named associated person or a party on-behalf-of an unnamed person
would be required to request expungement in a simplified customer
arbitration within 30 days of the date that FINRA provides notice of
arbitrator appointment.\178\ A named associated person or a party
requesting expungement on-behalf-of an unnamed person in a non-
simplified customer arbitration would be required to request
expungement no later than 30 days before the first scheduled
hearing.\179\
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\178\ The proposed rule change would require that if the named
associated person or party on-behalf-of an unnamed person requests
expungement in a pleading other than an answer, the request must be
filed within 30 days after the date FINRA provides the associated
person with notice of arbitrator appointment, which is the last
deadline provided to the parties in a simplified arbitration to
submit additional documents before the case is submitted to the
arbitrator. See proposed Rules 12800(d)(1)(B)(i) and
12800(d)(2)(B)(i).
\179\ See proposed Rules 12805(a)(1)(C)(i) and
12805(a)(2)(C)(iii). The proposed rule change also provides that
FINRA would notify state securities regulators, in the manner
determined by FINRA, of an expungement request within 30 days of
receiving a complete request for expungement. See proposed Rule
12805(b). State securities regulators would, therefore, have
additional time to review the request and decide whether to oppose
expungement if confirmation of an expungement recommendation is
later sought in court.
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[[Page 62161]]
Associated persons who do not request expungement within these time
limits may incur additional costs that may include costs arising from
delays in receiving a decision on the request and legal and forum fees.
The member firms with which the brokers were associated at the time the
customer dispute arose would also incur additional legal and forum
fees. These costs would be imposed by the proposed rule change.
C. Time Limits for Filing Straight-In Requests
The proposed rule change would also set forth requirements for an
associated person to file a straight-in request. For customer dispute
information reported to the CRD system after the effective date of the
proposed rule change, the proposed rule change would require an
associated person to file a straight-in request within two years of a
customer arbitration or civil litigation closing, or, if no customer
arbitration or civil litigation, within six years from the initial
reporting of the customer complaint to the CRD system.\180\
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\180\ See proposed Rules 13805(a)(2)(A)(iv) and
13805(a)(2)(A)(v).
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The proposed rule change would also require a two-year time limit
for requests to expunge customer dispute information that arose from a
customer arbitration or civil litigation that closed on or prior to the
effective date of the proposed rule change or a six-year time limit to
request expungement of customer dispute information arising from a
customer complaint initially reported to the CRD system on or prior to
the effective date of the proposed rule change.\181\ These time limits
would begin from the effective date of the proposed rule change.
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\181\ See proposed Rules 13805(a)(2)(B)(i) and
13805(a)(2)(B)(ii).
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Arbitrators on the Special Arbitrator Roster would have the
experience, qualifications and training necessary to decide straight-in
requests. These time limits may increase customer participation in the
proceedings and the likelihood that the panel from the Special
Arbitrator Roster receives the relevant evidence and testimony to
decide an expungement request. The time limits would help ensure that
the expungement hearing is held close in time to the customer
arbitration or civil litigation, or the events that led to the customer
dispute information disclosure, and foreclose the option of an
associated person to choose the timing of a straight-in request to
potentially reduce the likelihood of customer participation. Similar to
other amendments proposed herein, an increase in customer participation
may provide a panel from the Special Arbitrator Roster with additional
information to decide an expungement request and help ensure the
accuracy of the customer dispute information contained in the CRD
system and displayed through BrokerCheck.
These time limits, however, may constrain an associated person from
filing a straight-in request.\182\ Associated persons who would
otherwise delay the filing of a straight-in request may incur
additional costs to file a straight-in request within the required time
limits (e.g., opportunity costs, as described above). These time limits
may also constrain an associated person from filing more than one
expungement request in the same straight-in request. For example,
associated persons may lose the ability to delay the filing of a
straight-in request to expunge a complaint from a particular customer
until other customers make additional complaints, if the filing of the
straight-in request to expunge the complaint of the first customer
would be time barred. Instead, an associated person may be required (as
a result of the time limits) to file more than one straight-in request.
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\182\ If the Commission approves the proposed rule change, FINRA
expects that a number of associated persons would file a straight-in
request to expunge customer dispute information reported to the CRD
system prior to or soon after the effective date of the proposed
rule change to help ensure that they are not constrained from
seeking expungement because of the proposed time limitations.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Associated persons who are restricted from including more than one
request to expunge customer dispute information in the same straight-in
request would incur additional legal and forum fees for each straight-
in request or not seek expungement for all of the disclosures. The
member firm at which the associated person was associated at the time
the customer disputes arose would incur additional legal and forum fees
if the associated person were to file multiple, separate straight-in
requests.
D. Time Limits for Straight-In Requests--Quantitative Description
As discussed as part of the Economic Baseline, 3,725 expungement
requests were filed as straight-in requests during the sample period.
The following estimates demonstrate that the majority of these
straight-in requests would not have been permitted under the proposed
time limits, and associated persons may not have been able to include
more than one expungement request in the same straight-in request. The
estimates, however, do not take into account the potential change in
the behavior of associated persons; associated persons would have
incentive under the proposed amendments to file the straight-in
requests within the time limits or otherwise lose the ability to make
or file a request.\183\
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\183\ The following estimates also do not take into account the
number of straight-in requests of customer dispute information
arising from a previous (non-simplified or simplified) customer
arbitration which, under the proposed rule change, may have been
decided as part of the customer arbitration.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Among the 3,725 expungement requests filed as a straight-in
request, 1,140 requests followed a (non-simplified or simplified)
customer arbitration (of the same underlying dispute). Two-hundred
ninety of the 1,140 requests (25 percent) were filed as a straight-in
request within the two-year time limit and would have been permitted
under the proposed rule change. The remaining 850 requests (75 percent)
were filed as a straight-in request after the two-year time limit and
would not have been permitted. The median time from the close of the
customer arbitration to the filing of the straight-in request was six
years.
The 3,725 expungement requests filed as a straight-in request also
include 2,585 requests that did not follow a (non-simplified or
simplified) customer arbitration (of the same underlying dispute).
Among the 2,585 requests, 813 requests (31 percent) were filed as a
straight-in request within six years from the initial reporting of the
disclosure to the CRD system and would have been permitted under the
proposed rule change. The remaining 1,772 requests (69 percent) were
filed as a straight-in request after the six-year time limit and would
not have been permitted.
As discussed above, more than one expungement request can be made
in a single arbitration, and the time limits may limit the ability of
an associated person to include multiple expungement requests in the
same straight-in request. The 3,725 expungement requests filed as a
straight-in request relate to 1,778 arbitrations. Associated persons
included more than one request to expunge customer dispute information
in 810 of the 1,778 arbitrations. Under the proposed time limits,
associated persons would not have been able to include all expungement
requests in at least 225 of the 810 arbitrations.
[[Page 62162]]
E. Arbitrators or Panels Deciding Expungement Requests
The proposed rule change would require that the arbitrator or panel
from a non-simplified customer arbitration decide expungement requests
during the arbitration if the arbitration closes by award after a
hearing.\184\ In addition, the proposed rule change would require the
arbitrator from a simplified customer arbitration to decide expungement
requests if there is a full hearing, or in a separate expungement-only
hearing after the simplified arbitration closes if the arbitration is
decided ``on the papers'' or in a special proceeding.\185\ The proposed
rule change would also require a randomly selected panel from the
Special Arbitrator Roster to decide straight-in requests.\186\
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\184\ See proposed Rules 12805(a)(1)(D)(i) and
12805(a)(2)(E)(i).
\185\ See proposed Rule 12800(e)(1).
\186\ See proposed Rule 13806(b)(1).
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The proposed rule change is not structured to increase or decrease
the likelihood that an arbitrator or panel recommends expungement in
any individual hearing except as it relates to the merits of the
request. The proposed rule change is structured, however, to place an
arbitrator or panel in a better position to determine whether to
recommend expungement of customer dispute information, and thereby help
ensure the accuracy of the customer dispute information contained in
the CRD system and displayed through BrokerCheck. Under the proposed
rule change and in general, the arbitrator or panel that decides a
request would either hear the full merits of the customer case or have
additional training and qualifications when they are likely to receive
information only from the party requesting expungement. In addition,
panels from the Special Arbitrator Roster would be able to request
evidence from the member firm at which the associated person was
associated at the time the customer dispute arose.
The proposed rule change is also structured to reduce the potential
influence of associated persons and member firms on the selection of
the arbitrator or panel that decides an expungement request. First, a
panel from the Special Arbitrator Roster would be randomly selected to
decide a straight-in request, thereby decreasing the extent to which an
associated person and member firm with which the associated person was
associated at the time the customer dispute arose may together select
arbitrators who are more likely to recommend expungement.\187\
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\187\ See supra Item II.A.1.(II)B.2.b., ``Straight-in Requests
and the Special Arbitrator Roster, Composition of the Panel.''
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Second, the proposed rule change would foreclose the option for an
associated person to withdraw a request and seek expungement of the
same customer dispute information in a subsequent arbitration.\188\
Associated persons may exercise this option if they believe that they
have a higher probability of obtaining an expungement recommendation
with a different arbitrator or panel in another arbitration, and in
particular if the associated person files a straight-in request against
the member firm with which the broker was associated at the time the
customer dispute arose. To the extent that the associated person and
his or her employer's interests are aligned and both seek to increase
the likelihood that expungement is recommended, they would together be
expected to select arbitrators who may be more likely to recommend
expungement.\189\ Though these proposed amendments are consistent with
the regulatory intent to permit expungement in limited circumstances,
it may decrease the likelihood that associated persons are able to
obtain an award recommending expungement.
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\188\ This includes the requirement for an unnamed person to
provide written consent to an on-behalf-of request for it to
proceed, thereby preventing an unnamed person from subsequently
arguing that they were unaware of an expungement request on their
behalf. See proposed Rule 12805(a)(2)(A). This also includes the
requirement that a case be closed with prejudice if an associated
person withdraws a straight-in request after a panel from the
Special Arbitrator Roster is appointed (unless the panel decides
otherwise). See proposed Rule 13805(a)(4). In the sample period, an
associated person withdrew 155 of the 2,904 straight-in requests
(five percent) filed in cases that closed. The 155 straight-in
requests include 118 requests where an arbitrator or panel was
appointed.
\189\ A recent academic study finds evidence that suggests
parties can use previous expungement decisions to predict the
potential likelihood that an arbitrator would recommend expungement.
See Colleen Honigsberg & Matthew Jacob, ``Deleting Misconduct: The
Expungement of BrokerCheck Records,'' November 2018, https://www-cdn.law.stanford.edu/wp-content/uploads/2018/11/SSRN-id3284738.pdf.
The study also finds evidence that suggests both successful and
unsuccessful expungement attempts predict future broker misconduct.
An unsuccessful expungement attempt is associated with an
approximately four times higher probability of future misconduct.
Although expungement decisions are based on the information
available at the time of the request, including the facts and
circumstances of the arbitration, this finding suggests that the
decisions being made by arbitrators are related to the potential
future harm posed by the requesting broker.
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In general, under the proposed rule change, a three-person panel
would consider and decide expungement requests during non-simplified
customer arbitrations that close by award after a hearing and straight-
in requests. Expungement decisions by a three-person panel may differ
from expungement decisions by a single arbitrator. In addition, the
decisions may differ depending on the arbitrators selected and the
interaction among the arbitrators when deciding an expungement request.
The extent to which a three-person panel would decide an expungement
request differently than a single arbitrator, however, is not
known.\190\ As discussed above, expungement requests may be complex to
resolve, particularly straight-in requests where customers typically do
not participate in the expungement hearing. Thus, having three
arbitrators available to ask questions, request evidence and to serve
generally as fact-finders in the absence of customer input would help
ensure that a complete factual record is created to support the
arbitrators' decision in such expungement hearings.
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\190\ Among the 2,746 expungement requests filed as a straight-
in request where an arbitrator or panel made a decision, a similar
percentage of requests was recommended by a two- or three-person
panel (306 of 360 requests, or 85 percent) as was recommended by a
one-person panel (1,973 of 2,386 requests, or 83 percent). In
addition, among the 976 expungement requests during a non-simplified
or simplified customer arbitration where an arbitrator or panel made
a decision, a similar percentage of requests was recommended by a
two- or three-person panel (422 of 670 requests, or 63 percent) as
was recommended by a one-person panel (173 of 306 requests, or 57
percent).
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F. Arbitrators or Panels Deciding Expungement Requests--Quantitative
Description
As discussed as part of the Economic Baseline, 5,159 of the 6,928
expungement requests sought during the sample period were filed in an
arbitration that closed. Among the 5,159 expungement requests, 4,521
requests (88 percent) would have required a panel from the Special
Arbitrator Roster. The 4,521 requests include 2,456 expungement
requests made during a non-simplified customer arbitration that closed
by award without a hearing or other than by award, and 2,065 requests
that were filed as a straight-in request but did not relate to a
previous (non-simplified or simplified) customer arbitration.
An arbitrator or panel from a (non-simplified or simplified)
customer arbitration would have been required to decide 590 of the
5,159 expungement requests (11 percent). The 590 expungement requests
include 292 requests made during a non-simplified customer arbitration
that closed by
[[Page 62163]]
award after a hearing, 240 expungement requests made during a
simplified customer arbitration, and 58 requests filed as a straight-in
request to expunge customer dispute information arising from a previous
non-simplified customer arbitration that closed by award after a
hearing.
Finally, a panel from the Special Arbitrator Roster, or an
arbitrator from a simplified customer arbitration, would have been
required to decide the remaining 48 arbitration requests that relate to
customer dispute information arising from a previous simplified
customer arbitration. The arbitrator or panel that would have decided
the request is dependent on whether an associated person, or a party
on-behalf-of an associated person, would have requested expungement
during the simplified arbitration.
G. Participation in Expungement Hearings
The proposed rule change would require an associated person to
appear personally at an expungement hearing.\191\ This requirement
would provide the arbitrator or panel the opportunity to ask questions
of an associated person to better assess his or her credibility. An
associated person would be permitted to cross-examine and seek
information from customers who testify.\192\ This may provide
associated persons with the opportunity to substantiate their arguments
in support of their expungement request.
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\191\ See proposed Rules 12805(c)(2) and 13805(c)(2).
\192\ See proposed Rules 12805(c)(5)(A) and 13805(c)(5)(A).
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Associated persons may incur additional costs to appear at an
expungement hearing. The additional costs may depend on the method of
appearance (i.e., by telephone, videoconference, or in person), which,
under the proposed rule change, would be determined by the arbitrator
or panel. For example, associated persons who would otherwise not
appear in person may incur additional costs under the proposed rule
change if they are so required. The additional costs include the time
and expense to appear, and other direct and indirect costs (e.g.,
opportunity costs) associated with the associated person's appearance.
The proposed rule change would also help encourage customer
participation in an expungement hearing. As noted above, the proposed
rule change would require that a named associated person request
expungement during a non-simplified customer arbitration and that the
arbitrator or panel decide the expungement request if the arbitration
closes by award after a hearing. In addition, an expungement request
during a non-simplified customer arbitration would be considered and
decided by the arbitrator or panel from that arbitration.
Further, the proposed time limits for filing straight-in requests
may increase customer participation during these arbitrations. The
proposed rule change would also provide customers the option to appear
at an expungement hearing using whichever method is convenient for
them. The proposed rule change would also codify elements of the
Guidance that permit the customer to testify, cross-examine the
associated person and other witnesses, present evidence at the hearing
and make opening and closing arguments.\193\
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\193\ Other amendments to the proposed rule change would also
help encourage customer participation. For example, the proposed
rule change would allow customers to be represented at an
expungement hearing and thereby mitigate any potential concern they
may have regarding a direct confrontation with the associated
person. In addition, the proposed rule change provides that FINRA
would notify the customer of the time and place of the expungement
hearing. Customers would still retain the option to participate in
the expungement hearing or provide their position on the expungement
request in writing. The costs to participate would therefore be
borne at the customers' discretion.
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H. Impact on Business and Professional Opportunities
As a result of the proposed rule change, associated persons may
determine that the additional costs to seek expungement relief are
higher than the anticipated benefits. In addition, although the
proposed rule change is intended to help ensure arbitrators recommend
expungement when appropriate as it relates to the merits of the
request, an arbitrator or panel may be less likely to recommend
expungement depending on the information that becomes available for the
reasons described above. This may cause associated persons not to seek
expungement where expungement is likely (or unlikely) to be
recommended.
Associated persons who no longer seek, or are not able to expunge
customer dispute information from the CRD system and its display
through BrokerCheck, or are delayed in doing so, may experience a loss
of business and professional opportunities. The loss of business and
professional opportunities by one associated person, however, may be
the gain of another. Associated persons who may benefit in this regard
include those who still determine that the additional costs to seek
expungement relief under the proposed rule change is less than the
anticipated benefits and continue to seek expungement of customer
dispute information, and other associated persons who do not have
similar disclosures.
A firm or associated person can also initiate an expungement
proceeding directly in a court of competent jurisdiction without first
going through any arbitration proceeding. The proposed rule change may
incent firms or associated persons to initiate an expungement
proceeding directly in a court of competent jurisdiction without first
going through any arbitration proceeding. For some firms and associated
persons, the anticipated costs to first go through arbitration may be
greater than the similar costs to proceed directly in a court of
competent jurisdiction. Firms and associated persons who would
otherwise first go through arbitration as a result of the proposed rule
change may incur additional costs to seek expungement relief.
The number of firms or associated persons who would instead
initiate an expungement proceeding directly in a court of competent
jurisdiction is dependent not only on the additional costs under the
proposed rule change, but the costs a firm or associated person would
expect to incur in the different forums to initiate an expungement
proceeding. This information is generally not available, and
accordingly the potential effect of the proposed rule change on direct-
to-court expungement requests is uncertain.
I. Other Economic Effects
Finally, the proposed rule change may have other marginal economic
effects. First, the prohibition of a subsequent expungement request
would decrease the potential inefficient allocation of resources
resulting from a subsequent request that would have resulted in the
same decision (i.e., denial) as the first. The resources of the forum
allocated to the additional expungement request could instead be used
for other claims or requests that were not previously adjudicated or
for other purposes.\194\
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\194\ The resources relate to the specific costs to administer
the claim, as well as the overall attendant costs to administer the
forum.
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Second, the proposed rule change may increase the efficiency of the
forum by requiring that a party provide certain information when filing
an expungement request. The information includes identification of the
customer dispute information that is the subject of the request, and
whether expungement of the same customer dispute information was
previously requested
[[Page 62164]]
and, if so, how it was decided. This would increase the efficiency of
the forum by enabling FINRA to identify and track a request through the
expungement process, and by alerting arbitrators and FINRA to another
expungement request of the same customer dispute information. The
efficiency of the forum would also increase by requiring an unnamed
person to consent to an on-behalf-of expungement request in writing.
This would help ensure that an unnamed person is aware of the request
and prevent another expungement request by the unnamed person of the
same customer dispute information.
In addition, the proposed rule change may affect the value of the
customer dispute information to describe the conduct of associated
persons. The change in the value of the information depends on the
merit of the disclosures that would have otherwise been expunged. The
merit of these disclosures also depends on many factors which are
difficult to predict. These factors include the incentive of parties to
file an expungement request under the proposed rule change, the
decisions by the arbitrator or panel to recommend expungement dependent
on the information that is available, and the merit of the customer
dispute information that would have otherwise been sought to be
expunged.
As stated above, the proposed rule change is not structured to
increase or decrease the likelihood that an arbitrator or panel
recommends expungement in any individual hearing except as it relates
to the merits of the request. The proposed rule change may, however,
reduce the incentive for an associated person to request expungement
even when warranted. The effect of the proposed rule change on the
extent to which the customer dispute information available in the CRD
system (and its public display through BrokerCheck) accurately
describes the conduct of associated persons is, therefore, uncertain.
4. Alternatives Considered
Alternatives to the proposed rule change include amendments that
were proposed in Notice 17-42. Notice 17-42 proposed to restrict when a
party can file or serve an expungement request during a customer
arbitration to 60 days before the first hearing session begins.
Although 60 days would provide a customer with more time to address an
expungement request, 60 days may further restrict a party from seeking
expungement during a customer arbitration relative to the 30 days
before the first scheduled hearing begins in the proposed rule change.
FINRA believes that the proposed 30-day period would provide customers
with enough time to address an expungement request, and FINRA with
sufficient time to notify the states of the request. FINRA also
believes that 30 days would reduce the potential that parties would
lose their ability to file an expungement request during an
arbitration.
Notice 17-42 also proposed that an arbitrator or panel find that
the customer dispute information has ``no investor protection or
regulatory value,'' and that there must be a unanimous rather than a
majority decision by a panel to recommend expungement. These proposed
amendments may increase the difficulty for an associated person to
receive an expungement recommendation, and thereby deter an associated
person from seeking expungement. After considering the comments, FINRA
has determined not to propose that the panel must find ``no investor
protection or regulatory value'' to recommend expungement. FINRA agrees
with some commenters that the standard may, if codified into rule
language, create confusion among arbitrators and the potential for
inconsistent application among different arbitrators and panels.\195\ A
majority decision is also consistent with what is required for other
decisions in customer and industry arbitrations. FINRA also believes
that the overall proposal, coupled with the existing standards in FINRA
Rule 2080, would be sufficient to help preserve in the CRD system
information that is valuable to investors and regulators, while
allowing associated persons to remove information that is inaccurate.
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\195\ FINRA notes that in its Order approving NASD Rule 2130
(now FINRA Rule 2080), which describes the current findings that
arbitrators must make to recommend expungement, the SEC stated that
``it believes the proposal strikes the appropriate balance between
permitting members and associated persons to remove information from
the CRD system that holds no regulatory value, while at the same
time preserving information on the CRD system that is valuable to
investors and regulators.'' See Securities Exchange Act Release No.
48933 (December 16, 2003) 68 FR 74667, 74672 (December 24, 2003)
(Order Approving File No. SR-NASD-2002-168).
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Another alternative to the proposed rule change includes different
time limits for an associated person to file a straight-in request.
Although shorter (longer) time limits may increase (decrease) customer
participation in the proceedings and the likelihood that the panel from
the Special Arbitrator Roster receives the relevant evidence and
testimony to decide an expungement request, shorter (longer) time
limits may further (less) constrain an associated person from filing a
straight-in request or including more than one expungement request in
the same straight-in request. FINRA believes that the time limits
proposed herein would facilitate customer participation but also
provide associated persons sufficient opportunity to file a straight-in
request.
C. Self-Regulatory Organization's Statement on Comments on the Proposed
Rule Change Received From Members, Participants, or Others
In December 2017, FINRA published Notice 17-42, requesting comment
on proposed amendments to the expungement process including
establishing a roster of arbitrators with additional training and
specific backgrounds or experience from which a panel would be selected
to decide an associated person's request for expungement of customer
dispute information. The arbitrators from this roster would decide
expungement requests where the customer arbitration is not resolved on
the merits or the associated person files a straight-in request to
expunge customer dispute information. FINRA received 70 comments in
response to Notice 17-42.\196\ A copy of Notice 17-42 is attached [sic]
as Exhibit 2a. A list of comment letters received in response to Notice
17-42 is attached [sic] as Exhibit 2b and copies of the comment letters
are attached [sic] as Exhibit 2c.
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\196\ All references to commenters are to the comment letters as
listed in Exhibit 2b.
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In general, individual commenters supported some aspects of the
proposal and raised concerns with others. A summary of the comments and
FINRA's responses are discussed below.
1. Requirement To Request Expungement During a Customer Arbitration
In Notice 17-42, FINRA proposed that an associated person who is
named as a party in a customer arbitration must request expungement
during the arbitration or be prohibited from seeking to expunge the
customer dispute information arising from the customer's statement of
claim during any subsequent proceeding under the Codes.
NASAA and PIABA supported the proposed limitation. NASAA stated
that the limitation would help ensure timelier expungement requests and
help avoid requests made years after the underlying customer
arbitration has closed. PIABA stated that it did not believe that
requiring associated persons to request expungement during the customer
arbitration would result in more expungement requests because the
[[Page 62165]]
rule proposal contained ``heightened standards applicable to
expungement requests'' and a ``clear process for requesting expungement
following the close of the customer case,'' which may cause
``associated persons [to] be more deliberate in making expungement
requests.''
Some commenters opposed the limitation for a variety of
reasons.\197\ Cornell stated that it ``could lead associated persons to
request expungement in every dispute in order to preserve the right to
request expungement.'' Keesal stated that these additional expungement
requests could result in increased expenses to associated persons and
member firms and ``could impede the goals of protecting investors and
ensuring that FINRA arbitration remains an expedient and cost-effective
forum.'' Herskovits expressed a concern that an associated person ``may
be unaware of the important rights he is waiving by failing to file a
request for expungement in the underlying arbitration.'' Saretsky,
responding to FINRA's concern that customers and documents may be
unavailable when an associated person files a separate expungement
request years after the customer arbitration closed, stated that
customers can be located through counsel or internet searches, and that
securities industry rules mandate the retention of important customer
and account records for several years. JonesBell and Behr stated that
the requirement to request expungement during the customer arbitration
should apply only to named associated persons who have also appeared in
the arbitration.
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\197\ See Behr, Cornell, Herskovits, JonesBell, Keesal and
Saretsky.
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FINRA believes that requiring an associated person who is named in
a customer arbitration to request expungement during that arbitration
or be prohibited from doing so should help limit expungement requests
filed years after the customer arbitration concludes, facilitate
customer participation in expungement hearings and help ensure that
relevant evidence does not become stale or unavailable.\198\ The
proposed requirement would also help ensure that the panel that has
heard the merits of the customer's claim at a hearing would decide the
expungement request. Accordingly, FINRA believes that all associated
persons who are named in non-simplified arbitrations should be required
to request expungement during the arbitration, and that the requirement
should not depend on whether the associated person has chosen to enter
an appearance in response to the complaint. In addition, FINRA notes
that if the named associated person requests expungement, under the
proposed rule change, the associated person would be required to appear
at the expungement hearing.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\198\ See supra Item II.B.3.D., ``Time Limits for Straight-in
Requests--Quantitative Description.''
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The proposed amendments would also provide a detailed framework
governing the expungement process, which should help ensure that both
associated persons and customers are aware of their rights.
FINRA acknowledges commenters' concerns that the proposed
limitation could potentially result in an increase in the number of
expungement requests and their associated costs. To address this
concern, as well as the related concern that the requirement could
result in expungement requests by associated persons simply to preserve
their right to request expungement, FINRA has modified the proposed
rule to allow the associated person to make the request 30 days before
the hearing in the customer arbitration.\199\ This should provide
sufficient time during the customer arbitration for the associated
person to evaluate whether an expungement request is warranted and help
avoid unnecessary expungement requests.
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\199\ See supra Item II.A.1.(II)A.1.a.i., ``Method of Requesting
Expungement.''
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2. Deadline To File Expungement Request During a Customer Arbitration
In Notice 17-42, FINRA proposed that an expungement request made in
a pleading during a customer arbitration must be made no later than 60
days before the first hearing session begins. Three commenters opposed
the proposal, stating that the 60-day filing deadline was an
impractical or unnecessary restriction that could cause an associated
person to miss the deadline and, therefore, an opportunity to file a
request.\200\ These commenters suggested that the proposal retain the
status quo, which allows an associated person to request expungement up
to and during any hearing. One commenter, Keesal, supported a deadline
of 60 days before the first scheduled hearing date, provided, however,
that the associated person ``has appeared in [the] Underlying Customer
Case.'' Keesal stated that this would ``ensure[ ] that all
participants'' were ``on notice of the issues to be addressed and
determined at the evidentiary hearing.'' SIFMA stated that the proposed
requirement ``to file for expungement 60 days prior to the first
scheduled hearing date'' was impractical and would require the payment
of expungement fees even though a large portion of cases settle within
60 days of the hearing.
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\200\ See Behr, JonesBell and SIFMA.
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After considering the comments, FINRA does not believe that it is
necessary to require a 60-day filing deadline. Instead, the proposed
rule change would require that an expungement request be filed no later
than 30 days before the first scheduled hearing.\201\ This should
provide the parties with sufficient case preparation time, as the
expungement issues will overlap with the issues raised by the
customer's claim. If a named associated person seeks to request
expungement after the 30-day filing deadline, the panel would be
required to decide whether to grant an extension and permit the
request.\202\ The purpose of the deadline is to provide the parties
other than the associated person with sufficient notice that
expungement will be addressed at the hearing.
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\201\ See supra Item II.A.1.(II)A.1.a.i., ``Method of Requesting
Expungement.''
\202\ See supra note 37.
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In addition, FINRA has determined that requiring the party to
request expungement at least 30 days before the first ``hearing
session,'' which is typically the initial pre-hearing conference
(``IPHC'') rather than the first hearing on the merits, may not provide
the requesting party with sufficient time to make an informed decision
about whether to request expungement.\203\ Therefore, FINRA has
modified the proposal to require that an expungement request must be
made 30 days before the first scheduled ``hearing'' begins to provide
time for the requesting party to make a better-informed decision.\204\
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\203\ The term ``hearing session'' means any meeting between the
parties and arbitrator(s) of four hours or less, including a hearing
or a prehearing conference. See FINRA Rules 12100(p) and 13100(p).
The IPHC is scheduled after the panel is appointed. During the IPHC,
the panel will set discovery, briefing, and motions deadlines,
schedule subsequent hearing sessions, and address other preliminary
matters. The parties may agree, however, to forgo the IPHC. See
generally FINRA Rules 12500 and 13500.
\204\ Under the Codes, a ``hearing'' means a hearing on the
merits. See supra note 21.
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3. Panel From the Customer Arbitration Decides Expungement Requests
Where the Customer Arbitration Closes by Award After a Hearing
In Notice 17-42, FINRA proposed that if the customer arbitration
closes by award, the panel from the customer arbitration would consider
and decide the expungement request during the customer arbitration.
Some commenters disagreed with this aspect of the proposal and
suggested
[[Page 62166]]
that a panel selected from the Special Arbitrator Roster should decide
all expungement requests, even if the customer arbitration was decided
by an award.\205\ For example, PIABA stated that a panel from the
Special Arbitrator Roster should decide the expungement request
separate from the customer's claim because the ``decision a panel is
asked to make with respect to expungement is different than deciding
whether or not to find liability on a customer claim'' and because it
is ``unfair to require a customer to participate in a potentially
lengthy expungement hearing that they did not ask for.'' Grebenik
stated that the expungement request should be evaluated separately by
an independent panel because the arbitrator may ``have bias'' and ``has
heard comments and issues from the customer [about] the actual claim.''
AdvisorLaw stated that all expungement requests should receive the
``same level of review and consideration by a specially trained
arbitration panel.''
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\205\ See AdvisorLaw, Georgia State, Grebenik, PIABA, St.
John's, Tinklenberg and UNLV. In addition, St. John's ``strongly
agree[d] with requiring associated or unnamed persons to wait until
the conclusion of a customer's case to file an expungement
request.''
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Cornell expressed a concern that the proposed requirement could
``transform hearings designed to determine the merits of a customer
dispute into lengthy expungement hearings.'' Cornell proposed, as an
alternative, that the same panel from the customer arbitration make the
expungement determination, but do so in a separate proceeding to avoid
inconveniencing the customer.
Keesal questioned whether the proposed requirement that the panel
from the customer arbitration decide the expungement request if the
customer arbitration ``closes by award'' would require the panel to
decide an expungement request if the cases closes as a result of an
order dismissing the case.
In response to the comments, FINRA is clarifying that the panel
from the customer arbitration would be required to decide the
expungement request and include its decision in the award if the
arbitration ``closes by award after a hearing'' instead of where the
arbitration ``closes by award.'' FINRA believes that where the panel
from the customer arbitration has heard the parties' presentation of
the evidence about the customer's claim, that same panel is best
situated to decide the expungement request. In addition, it would
generally be more efficient and less costly for the panel from the
customer arbitration to decide the expungement request in these
circumstances. Although FINRA Rule 2080(b)(1) requires the panel to
make a separate, different determination than its determination on the
merits of the customer's claim, the evidence offered with respect to
both determinations should generally overlap. Accordingly, FINRA does
not believe that it would overly burden the parties if, when the
customer arbitration closes by award after a hearing, the panel must
also decide the expungement request in addition to the merits of the
customer's claim.
4. Qualifications of Arbitrators on the Special Arbitrator Roster
In Notice 17-42, FINRA proposed that to qualify for the Special
Arbitrator Roster, a public chairperson would be required to: (i) Have
completed enhanced expungement training; (ii) be admitted to the
practice of law in at least one jurisdiction; and (iii) have five
years' experience in litigation, federal or state securities
litigation, administrative law, service as a securities regulator or
service as a judge. Commenters generally supported the proposed
requirements,\206\ but were split on whether the members of the Special
Arbitrator Roster should be required to be attorneys.\207\ One
commenter, Black, did not oppose the proposed qualifications but
suggested that they would likely result in fewer eligible arbitrators
for straight-in requests. PIABA stated that the Special Arbitrator
Roster should be made up of attorneys because it would be difficult for
FINRA, in some areas of the country, to alternatively fill the Special
Arbitrator Roster with local chair-qualified arbitrators that had
served on three arbitrations through award. PIABA also stated that
arbitrators with legal training may be better equipped to make the
distinction between the FINRA Rule 2080 grounds for expungement and
deciding the merits of the underlying claim. Keesal, in contrast,
stated that there was no rationale for allowing non-attorneys to decide
expungement requests made during the customer arbitration, but not
brought as a stand-alone claim.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\206\ See, e.g., SIFMA (supporting the proposal, and stating
that more highly qualified and trained arbitrators should lead to a
more efficient and fair process); NASAA (supporting the proposal,
and stating that the extent to which the panels truly appreciate the
nuanced regulatory issues related to expungement largely depended on
the content and effectiveness of the proposed enhanced expungement
training).
\207\ See AdvisorLaw, FSI, Gocek, Keesel, Osiason, Rodriguez and
White (all opposing the requirement that members of the Special
Arbitrator Roster be attorneys). But cf. Cornell, Georgia State,
NASAA, PIABA, Schlein, SIFMA, St. John's and Tinklenberg (all
supporting the requirement).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Some commenters also expressed concerns that the arbitrators on the
Special Arbitrator Roster were not required to have securities industry
experience.\208\ FSI stated that without this background ``it may be
difficult to appreciate whether information has regulatory significance
or investor protection value.'' AdvisorLaw stated that ``[r]equiring
all expungement arbitrators to have a minimum of five years' experience
with the financial services industry [would be] appropriate considering
the complexity of expungement requests in cases involving customer
dispute information.'' In contrast, Public Citizen suggested that at
least one FINRA employee who meets the requirements of the Special
Arbitrator Roster be a member of every three-person panel that
considers an expungement request.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\208\ See AdvisorLaw, Behr, FSI and JonesBell. Behr and
JonesBell also criticized the proposal as allowing claimants'
attorneys ``whose business is the ligation of customer complaints''
to serve on the Special Arbitrator Roster. FINRA notes, however,
that the proposal requires that arbitrators on the Special
Arbitrator Roster be public arbitrators, and that FINRA's definition
of public arbitrators excludes, among other persons, those who
devote 20 percent or more of their professional time to representing
parties in disputes concerning investment accounts or transactions,
or employment relationships within the financial industry. See FINRA
Rules 12100(aa) and 13100(x); see also supra note 8.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
After considering the comments, FINRA has determined not to propose
requiring that the members of the Special Arbitrator Roster be
attorneys; instead, they would be required to be public arbitrators who
have evidenced successful completion of, and agreement with, enhanced
expungement training, and have served as an arbitrator through award on
at least four customer-initiated arbitrations.\209\ FINRA believes that
the non-attorneys on its roster who meet these qualifications and
complete enhanced expungement training should be appropriately
knowledgeable and experienced to decide straight-in requests. The
requirement that the arbitrators on the Special Arbitrator Roster be
public arbitrators should help ensure that the arbitrators are free of
bias. The requirement that they have served on four cases through to
award would help ensure that the members of the Special Arbitrator
Roster have the necessary knowledge and experience to conduct hearings
in the forum.
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\209\ See proposed Rule 13806(b)(2)(B). In addition, to qualify
for the Special Arbitrator Roster, the arbitrators must be
chairpersons and, therefore, will have completed the training that
arbitrators must complete before they can be added to the
chairperson roster. See also supra note 80.
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[[Page 62167]]
Although FINRA believes that a sufficient number of arbitrators on
its roster would meet these additional qualifications, if the
Commission approves the proposed rule change, FINRA would engage in
efforts to recruit arbitrators for the Special Arbitrator Roster. FINRA
notes that its Office of Dispute Resolution has embarked on an
aggressive campaign to recruit new arbitrators, with a particular focus
on adding arbitrators from diverse backgrounds, professions and
geographical locations.\210\ FINRA's commitment and focus on this
critical initiative have resulted in increases in under-represented
categories of arbitrators.\211\ FINRA believes its continued commitment
to this important initiative will help the forum improve the quality,
depth and diversity of its public chairperson roster.
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\210\ See Our Commitment to Achieving Arbitrator and Mediator
Diversity at FINRA, https://www.finra.org/arbitration-mediation/our-commitment-achieving-arbitrator-and-mediator-diversity-finra.
\211\ See supra note 210.
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5. Special Arbitrator Roster Decides Expungement Requests if the
Customer Arbitration Closes Other Than by Award or by Award Without a
Hearing
In Notice 17-42, FINRA proposed that if the customer arbitration
closes other than by award (e.g., the parties settle the arbitration),
the panel in that arbitration would not decide the associated person's
expungement request. Instead, the associated person would be permitted
to file an expungement request as a new claim under the Industry Code
against the member firm at which he or she was associated at the time
of the events giving rise to the customer dispute.
The SEC Investor Advocate supported the proposal because FINRA's
data showed that where the arbitration case was not decided on the
merits, the expungement rate was ``simply too high for an extraordinary
remedy.'' (emphasis in original). NASAA also supported the proposal,
stating that ``post-settlement expungement hearings often consist of a
one-sided presentation of the facts'' because ``investors and their
counsel have little incentive to participate after the customer's
concerns have been resolved.''
Some commenters disagreed with the proposal to require the
associated person to file a new arbitration under the Industry Code if
the customer arbitration closes other than by award, as inefficient or
burdensome on associated persons.\212\ As an alternative, SIFMA
suggested that the panel from the customer arbitration decide the
request; but, to address FINRA's concern for greater training and
increased qualifications for those arbitrators determining expungement,
SIFMA suggested that the proposed rule change require that at least one
arbitrator on every three-person panel be selected from the Special
Arbitrator Roster at the inception of each customer arbitration.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\212\ See Behr, Herskovits, JonesBell, Saretsky and SIFMA.
Herskovits also stated that ``[financial advisors] will respond to
the proposed rule by filing a counterclaim or cross claim for
expungement in the customer arbitration, thus preventing the
customer arbitration from closing before a hearing is held on
expungement or the [financial advisors'] other claims for relief.''
FINRA notes, however, that under the proposed rule change, a request
for expungement relief would not prevent a customer arbitration from
closing.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Saretsky stated that associated persons should be able to name the
customer, and that the ``minor inconvenience'' to the customer was
outweighed by the harm to the associated person. PIABA stated that it
would be ``inappropriate'' to name customers. St. John's ``support[ed]
allowing the proposed expungement process to proceed without the
customer having to be named a party to the request.''
Schlein expressed concerns that a former employing member firm may
have ``little or no economic incentive to cooperate in an expungement
proceeding,'' and that it ``would also be difficult for the panel to
elicit potentially relevant facts'' where the ``economic and
reputational interests of the associated person and the employer are
aligned.'' Schlein also stated that an ``aggrieved customer has no
economic incentive to participate in an expungement proceeding that
occurs only after the underlying case has concluded.'' Schlein also
expressed concern that expungement requests would be referred to the
Special Arbitrator Roster even if the matter settled on the eve of
hearing, when it may be more efficient and promote investor protection
to require the existing panel to hear the expungement request. Schlein
stated that ``FINRA could ameliorate the possibility that a panel might
receive one-sided information'' by (i) providing the expungement panel
with significant filings from the underlying customer dispute, (ii)
permitting the panel to review the parties' settlement papers and (iii)
giving the associated person, firm, and the customer the right to
provide the panel with transcripts of the underlying customer
proceeding.
FINRA believes that where there has not been a hearing on the
merits of the customer's claim, the members of the Special Arbitrator
Roster, who would be public chairpersons who have served on at least
four customer arbitrations in which a hearing was held and received
enhanced expungement training, would be better situated to decide
expungement requests than the panel from the customer arbitration.
FINRA does not believe that requiring the associated person to file a
new arbitration under the Industry Code would unduly burden the
associated person--instead of presenting evidence related to the
expungement request to the arbitrators in the customer arbitration in a
separate expungement hearing, they would instead present the evidence
supporting the expungement request to a panel randomly selected from
the Special Arbitrator Roster.
FINRA shares commenters' concerns that the factual record could be
less well-developed where a straight-in request is filed against a
member firm and the associated person or member firm's interests are
aligned, or where the customer does not participate. FINRA does not
believe, however, that the customer should be named as a respondent or
be required to participate in an expungement proceeding after the
customer's claim has been resolved (e.g., after the claim is settled).
Instead, the proposed rule change addresses concerns that straight-in
requests filed against the member firm may be non-adversarial or lack
customer participation by, among other things (i) requiring that
straight-in requests be decided by three randomly selected public
chairpersons with enhanced training and experience,\213\ (ii) requiring
the panel to review the settlement documents,\214\ (iii) granting the
panel the explicit authority to request from the associated person, the
member firm at which he or she was associated at the time the customer
dispute arose or other party requesting expungement, any documentary,
testimonial or other evidence that it deems relevant to the expungement
request,\215\ and (iv) including provisions to encourage and facilitate
customer participation in expungement hearings.\216\
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\213\ See supra Item II.A.1.(II)B.2.b., ``Straight-in Requests
and the Special Arbitrator Roster, Composition of the Panel.''
\214\ See proposed Rules 12805(c)(7) and 13805(c)(7).
\215\ See proposed Rules 12805(c)(6) and 13805(c)(6).
\216\ See supra Item II.A.1.(II)D.3., ``Customer's Participation
during the Expungement Hearing.''
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In response to commenters' concerns, FINRA has modified the
language in the proposed rule change to require that a straight-in
request be filed against the
[[Page 62168]]
member firm at which he or she was associated ``at the time the
customer dispute arose,'' consistent with the language used in other
FINRA rules, instead of ``at the time of the events giving rise to the
customer dispute.'' \217\
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\217\ See, e.g., FINRA Rules 12901(a)(1)(C) and 13903(b); see
also Kessal.
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6. Three Randomly Selected Arbitrators Decide Straight-In Requests
In Notice 17-42, FINRA proposed that the NLSS would randomly select
three public chairpersons to serve on the Special Arbitrator Roster who
would decide the request for expungement, and that the first arbitrator
selected would be the chairperson. The parties would not be permitted
to agree to fewer than three arbitrators or to the use of pre-selected
arbitrators. The associated person seeking expungement would not be
permitted to strike any arbitrators, but would be able to challenge a
selected arbitrator for cause.
PIABA and AdvisorLaw supported the proposed random selection of
three arbitrators. PIABA stated that the random selection of three
arbitrators would ``reduce the risk of arbitrators being concerned
about ruling against an associated person for fear they may not be
selected for another panel.''
Other commenters opposed the proposed rule change. SIFMA expressed
concerns that not permitting parties to rank and strike arbitrators
would remove the parties' involvement and input.\218\ SIFMA also stated
that there was no compelling need to use three rather than a single
arbitrator, and that the proposal would increase the financial burden
on registered representatives seeking expungement. Walter stated that a
single FINRA-qualified arbitrator with the special qualifications would
be ``more than qualified to make a determination as to expungement''
and that ``[h]aving to coordinate the schedules of three arbitrators
will delay the processing and will impose unnecessarily high additional
costs on all parties involved.'' \219\ Tinklenberg opposed the three-
person panel requirement because of the associated costs. Baritz stated
that the three-person panel requirement would increase expenses to
associated persons and the ``time necessary to rank and choose a
panel,'' and ``significantly delay the process.''
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\218\ SIFMA also proposed that ``to preserve arbitrator
neutrality and foster greater transparency,'' FINRA make publicly
available all training materials, communications with arbitrators
regarding expungement, and documents related to the addition,
removal or exclusion of any arbitrators from the roster. FINRA notes
that making such communications and documents publicly available
could have a chilling effect on arbitrator recruitment and
communications. FINRA does, however, make expungement training
materials publicly available. See supra note 82.
\219\ See also Saretsky.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Keesal opposed the random selection of three arbitrators as unfair
to associated persons, and suggested that FINRA ``randomly select a
minimum of 12 proposed arbitrators to serve on an expungement case,
from which the associated person and anyone else involved in the case
can rank and strike the proposed panelists.''
FINRA notes that since straight-in requests may be complex, may not
be actively opposed by another party and the customer or customer's
representative typically does not appear at the hearing, having three
arbitrators from the Special Arbitrator Roster available to ask
questions and request evidence would help ensure that a complete
factual record is developed to support the arbitrators' decision. In
addition, FINRA believes that requiring two out of three randomly
selected public chairpersons with enhanced training and qualifications
to agree that expungement is appropriate in straight-in requests should
help FINRA maintain the integrity of its CRD records and ensure that
expungement is recommended in limited circumstances and only when one
of the FINRA Rule 2080(b)(1) grounds applies.
FINRA does not believe that selecting three rather than one
arbitrator would overly burden the parties during the proceeding or
result in undue delay. As the parties would not be permitted to rank or
strike these arbitrators, this should shorten the average length of the
proceeding.\220\ In addition, pursuant to FINRA Rule 13403, FINRA would
send the lists generated by the NLSS to all parties at the same time,
within approximately 30 days after the last answer is due, regardless
of the parties' agreement to extend any answer due date.
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\220\ Under the Codes, the lists of ranked arbitrators must be
completed and returned to the Director no more than 20 days after
the date the Director sends the lists to the parties. See., e.g.,
FINRA Rules 12403(c)(3) and 13404. However, the parties may agree to
extend the due date. See FINRA Rules 12105 and 13105.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
FINRA recognizes that the proposed random arbitrator selection
process would limit party input on arbitrator selection. However, the
arbitrators on the Special Arbitrator Roster would have the experience,
qualifications and training necessary to conduct a fair and impartial
expungement hearing in accordance with the proposed rules, and to
render a recommendation based on a complete factual record developed
during the expungement hearing. FINRA believes that the higher
standards that the arbitrators must meet to serve on the Special
Arbitrator Roster should mitigate the impact of the absence of party
input on the selection of arbitrators. In addition, associated persons
and member firms would still be permitted to challenge any arbitrator
for cause.\221\
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\221\ See proposed Rule 13806(b)(4).
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7. Simplified Arbitrations
In Notice 17-42, FINRA proposed to require that an associated
person or unnamed person wait until the conclusion of a customer's
simplified arbitration case to file an expungement request, which would
be filed under the Industry Code against the member firm at which he or
she was associated at the time the customer dispute rose and would be
heard by a panel selected from the Special Arbitrator Roster.
Some commenters supported the proposal.\222\ PIABA stated that it
would address a flaw in the current process, whereby a hearing is held
to consider expungement even if the customer has not requested a
hearing under FINRA Rule 12800, and that it would eliminate delays in
securing an award because the arbitrator is considering the request for
expungement. PIABA also stated that a single arbitrator should not be
permitted to decide an expungement request in a simplified arbitration
because the goals of the proposed amendments should not be affected
simply because the misconduct involved $50,000 or less.\223\ The SEC
Investor Advocate stated that it would be easier for a broker to
convince one arbitrator to recommend expungement. St. John's stated
that ``separating the expungement request from the underlying customer
case'' should result in ``faster decisions in simplified cases.''
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\222\ See NASAA, PIABA, The SEC Investor Advocate, St. John's
and UNLV.
\223\ See also UNLV.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Some commenters opposed the proposed change and stated that the
arbitrator who heard the evidence in the underlying simplified customer
arbitration would be most qualified to determine an expungement
request, and that it was unfair to impose the burden of a subsequent
arbitration on the associated person in this circumstance.\224\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\224\ See Behr, JonesBell and Keesal.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
After considering the comments, FINRA has revised the proposed rule
change to provide that if a party requests expungement during a
simplified arbitration, the single arbitrator from the simplified
arbitration would be required to decide the
[[Page 62169]]
expungement request, regardless of how the simplified arbitration case
closes (e.g., even if the case settles).\225\ FINRA believes that it is
appropriate for the single arbitrator in a simplified arbitration case
to decide expungement requests, regardless of how the underlying case
closes, due to the lower monetary requirement and generally less
complex nature of these cases. To address concerns that customers
should not be required to participate in a hearing addressing
expungement requests in simplified arbitrations, the proposed rule
change would require arbitrators to hold a separate expungement-only
hearing after the customer's dispute is decided to consider the
expungement request if the customer elects to have his or her claim
decided on the papers or through an Option Two special proceeding. The
arbitrator would be required to issue a subsequent, separate award in
connection with the expungement-only hearing.\226\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\225\ See proposed Rule 12800(e)(1).
\226\ See proposed Rule 12800(e)(1)(A).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
8. Fees That Parties Will Incur To File a New Claim Under the Industry
Code To Request Expungement
Some commenters expressed concerns that if an associated person
were required to file a separate claim under the Industry Code to
request expungement after the customer arbitration closes other than by
award, the member firm and associated person would be assessed the
filing fee, member surcharge and process fees twice, in both the
underlying customer arbitration and the separate straight-in
request.\227\ SIFMA stated that this could increase the costs of
expungement and have the ``indirect effect of increasing the costs of
settlement, potentially discouraging settlement in smaller cases due to
the increased costs associated with expungement.''
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\227\ See Janney, Keesal and SIFMA.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
FINRA believes that it is appropriate to assess the member
surcharge and process fee for straight-in requests because they are
separate arbitrations before a separate panel of specially trained
arbitrators. The member firm, having not previously paid a member
surcharge and process fee for the expungement request, would be
assessed these fees when and if a straight-in request is filed. FINRA
would not, however, assess a second filing fee when an associated
person files a straight-in request if the associated person, or the
requesting party if it is an on-behalf-of request, has previously paid
the filing fee to request expungement of the same customer dispute
information during a customer arbitration.
9. Arbitrators ``Recommend'' Rather Than ``Grant'' Expungement
In Notice 17-42, FINRA requested comment on whether to revise FINRA
Rules 12805 and 13805 to state that the panel may ``recommend'' rather
than ``grant'' expungement if the FINRA Rule 2080 standards are
satisfied. Several commenters supported the revision as a clarifying
change that would more accurately reflect the panel's role in the
expungement process.\228\ For example, PIABA stated that after the
panel recommends expungement, under FINRA Rule 2080 the member or
associated person ``must obtain an order from a court of competent
jurisdiction confirming the arbitration award containing expungement
relief.'' AdvisorLaw and Tinklenberg opposed the proposed rule change,
with AdvisorLaw stating that ``grant'' should be retained because
``[i]t has long been established that the decisions made in arbitration
are final and binding upon the parties,'' and that ``[c]hanging the
language of the Rule from the word `grant' to `recommend' may lessen
the perceived binding effect of the decision.'' \229\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\228\ See Black, Cornell, Georgia State, Gocek, Keesal and
PIABA.
\229\ See also Wellington.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
FINRA believes that ``recommend'' more accurately captures the
panel's authority in the expungement process. Pursuant to FINRA Rule
2080, FINRA will only expunge customer dispute information after a
court of competent jurisdiction enters an order requiring it to do so.
Accordingly, the proposed rule change would change the word ``grant''
to ``recommend'' in proposed Rules 12805 and 13805.\230\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\230\ See supra note 10.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
10. Unanimity of Decision
In Notice 17-42, FINRA proposed that to recommend expungement, a
three-person panel of arbitrators would be required to agree
unanimously to recommend expungement. Some commenters opposed the
unanimity requirement as making it too difficult to obtain expungement
or because it was inconsistent with the ability of a customer to
prevail by a majority decision.\231\ SIFMA, for example, stated that
the unanimity requirement would ``impinge upon the fundamental fairness
of the expungement process in providing an effective balance to the
allegation-based complaint reporting regime and will have a significant
impact on registered representatives' ability to protect their
livelihoods and reputations.'' JonesBell and Behr stated that ``t[o]
require a unanimous decision on any expungement request obviously would
give a single individual sitting on a three-member panel the power to
prevent, for improper reason or no good reason at all, a meritorious
request that a false or erroneous claim be removed from a
representative's CRD record.''
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\231\ See AdvisorLaw, Behr, Gocek, Hagenstein, Higgenbotham,
Janney, JonesBell, Keesal, Leven, Mahoney, Saretsky, SIFMA, Smart,
Speicher, Tinklenberg and White.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Other commenters supported requiring a unanimous decision to
recommend expungement.\232\ For example, PIABA stated that the
unanimity requirement would help ensure that expungement was an
extraordinary remedy that is only granted when it has no meaningful
investor protection or regulatory value. The SEC Investor Advocate
stated that the requirement would provide greater ``assurance that only
meritless complaints are expunged,'' and expressed hope ``that this
requirement will encourage brokers to only seek expungement when the
underlying customer dispute information is meritless.'' Cornell stated
that the ``unanimity requirement protects public investors by ensuring
that the threshold for expungement is high,'' and that, ``given the
history of abuse of the expungement process,'' would ``help[ ] to
ensure that when expungement is granted, the expungement is
legitimate.''
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\232\ See Black, Cornell, Georgia State, Liebrader, NASAA,
PIABA, Public Citizen, The SEC Investor Advocate and UNLV. In
addition, Wellington stated that if an expungement was endorsed
unanimously, the term ``grant'' should be retained, there should be
little or no cost to the requesting party, and the associated person
should not have to obtain a court order directing the expungement.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
After considering the comments, FINRA has determined to allow
arbitrators to recommend expungement through a majority decision,
consistent with what is required for other decisions in customer and
industry arbitrations.\233\ FINRA believes that requiring a majority of
arbitrators to agree that expungement is appropriate should be
sufficient to help preserve in the CRD system information that is
valuable to investors and regulators, while allowing associated persons
a reasonable mechanism to remove information that is inaccurate. FINRA
notes, however, that if the SEC approves the proposed rule change,
FINRA will continue to monitor the expungement process to determine if
additional changes are needed.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\233\ See FINRA Rules 12904(a) and 13904(a).
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[[Page 62170]]
11. No Investor Protection or Regulatory Value
In Notice 17-42, FINRA proposed to require that a panel find that
customer dispute information has ``no investor protection or regulatory
value'' to recommend expungement. Several commenters opposed the
requirement.\234\ For example, Herskovits stated that the standard was
vague and opened the possibility of inconsistent rulings among
different panels. FSI stated that the proposal was ``confusing as it is
difficult to imagine a scenario where information that is false,
clearly erroneous, factually impossible or did not involve the advisor,
would have regulatory or investor protection value.'' SIFMA stated that
the requirement was redundant in light of the current high standards in
FINRA Rule 2080(b)(1), may have the effect of discouraging meritorious
expungement claims, was already incorporated into the Guidance and
would transform the traditional role of arbitrators as fact-finders and
require them to make a policy determination in each case. Keesal stated
that the change would unnecessarily complicate the expungement process
to the detriment of associated persons with no corresponding investor
protection value. Saretsky proposed that arbitrators instead be
required to find that the customer dispute had no ``reasonable''
investor protection or regulatory value.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\234\ See Baritz, FSI, Gocek, Herskovits, Janney, Keesal,
Saretsky, SIFMA and White.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
NASAA expressed a concern with the proposal because it would allow
arbitrators, rather than regulators, to make the finding. The SEC
Investor Advocate expressed the same concern, and suggested that FINRA
provide a framework on how the standard should be interpreted and
applied to avoid disparate interpretations and outcomes. Schlein stated
that arbitrators ``should receive supplemental training on the proposed
new standard,'' and that FINRA should also ``offer training or
instructional materials to judges'' who will be required to confirm an
expungement award.
Other commenters supported the requirement.\235\ For example, PIABA
suggested that arbitrators should be required to make the finding
because in practice arbitration panels ``often believe that the Rule
2080 standards are easily met'' and ``do not grasp the fact that'' a
claim may not be factually impossible or false even though a customer
has not met his or her burden of proof for purposes of establishing
liability or rebutting an affirmative defense. St. John's stated that
the proposed requirement would ``help strengthen investor protection by
improving confidence in the accuracy of the CRD system and
BrokerCheck.'' Cornell stated that the requirement would allow the
panel to look beyond the claim and at the associated person's record as
a whole, including other customer dispute information, which would
protect public investors. Liebrader stated that ``[t]oo many legitimate
claims disappear from public view in the largely uncontested
expungement process.''
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\235\ See Cornell, Liebrader, PIABA, St. John's and UNLV.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
After considering the comments, FINRA has determined not to propose
that the panel must find ``no investor protection or regulatory value''
to recommend expungement. FINRA agrees with some commenters that the
standard may, if codified into rule language, create confusion among
arbitrators and the potential for inconsistent application among
different arbitrators and panels.\236\ FINRA also believes that the
overall proposal, coupled with the existing standards in FINRA Rule
2080, would be sufficient to help preserve in the CRD system
information that is valuable to investors and regulators, while
allowing associated persons to remove information that is inaccurate.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\236\ FINRA notes that in its Order approving NASD Rule 2130
(now FINRA Rule 2080), which describes the current findings that
arbitrators must make to recommend expungement, the SEC stated that
``it believes the proposal strikes the appropriate balance between
permitting members and associated persons to remove information from
the CRD system that holds no regulatory value, while at the same
time preserving information on the CRD system that is valuable to
investors and regulators.'' See Securities Exchange Act Release No.
48933 (December 16, 2003) 68 FR 74667, 74672 (December 24, 2003)
(Order Approving File No. SR-NASD-2002-168).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
12. Panel Must Identify One of the FINRA Rule 2080(b)(1) Grounds for
Expungement
In Notice 17-42, FINRA clarified in proposed Rules 12805 and 13805
that the FINRA Rule 2080 grounds for expungement that the panel must
identify to recommend expungement are the grounds stated in paragraph
(b)(1) of FINRA Rule 2080. In response to Notice 17-42, PIABA supported
clarifying ``that an arbitration panel may not recommend expungement on
grounds other than those set forth in Rule 2080.'' Keesal, however,
viewed FINRA's proposal as ``remov[ing] the arbitrator's ability to
grant expungement relief based on judicial or arbitral findings other
than those listed in Rule 2080(b)(1).'' \237\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\237\ See also Baritz; compare SIFMA (stating that ``FINRA
already imposes high standards in order for arbitrators to recommend
expungement,'' and that ``FINRA Rule 2080(b)(1) requires a finding
either that: (i) the claim or allegation is factually impossible or
clearly erroneous; (ii) the registered person was not involved in
the alleged sales practice violation, forgery, theft,
misappropriation or conversion of funds, or (iii) the claim,
allegation, or information is false'').
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
FINRA notes that under current FINRA Rule 12805, arbitrators are
required to base their expungement recommendations on one of the three
grounds listed in FINRA Rule 2080(b)(1).\238\ Accordingly, the proposed
rule change clarifies in proposed Rules 12805 and 13805 that the
grounds for expungement that the panel must indicate in its award are
the grounds in FINRA Rule 2080(b)(1).\239\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\238\ See Regulatory Notice 08-79 (December 2008) (stating that
``[t]he arbitration panel must indicate which of the grounds for
expungement under Rule 2130(b)(1)(A)-(C) serve as the basis for
their expungement order, and provide a brief written explanation of
the reasons for ordering expungement'').
\239\ See proposed Rules 12805(c)(8) and 13805(c)(8).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
13. Time Limits for Straight-In Requests
In Notice 17-42, FINRA proposed that for customer arbitrations,
associated persons must file straight-in requests within one-year from
the date the customer arbitration closed. For customer complaints,
FINRA proposed that associated persons must file straight-in requests
within one-year from the date that a member firm initially reported the
complaint to the CRD system. For customer arbitrations that close and
customer complaints that are reported prior to the effective date of
the proposed rule change, the associated person would have six months
from the effective date of the rule, if approved by the Commission, to
file the expungement request.
Some commenters opposed the proposed time limitations as
unwarranted or too short.\240\ For example, SIFMA stated that the one-
year time limitation is unnecessary because the general six-year period
to file all claims also applies to expungement requests. SIFMA also
stated that the one-year time limitation is insufficient for firms to
properly investigate and respond to customer complaints, and would
create inefficiency by requiring the filing of requests to expunge
customer complaints that would then be stayed if they evolved into an
arbitration. SIFMA also requested ``further guidance on the extended
time period that will be afforded registered representatives who have
eligible claims for expungement
[[Page 62171]]
that would become ineligible if the rule proposals were implemented.''
\241\ JonesBell and Behr stated that an associated person may be
unaware that a member firm ``has reported a customer complaint on his
or her CRD.'' \242\ FSI stated that associated persons should have
three years to file expungement requests to provide them with time to
assess how the information will impact their business, which may not be
immediately apparent. Keesal stated that because customers may wait up
to six years to file an arbitration claim under FINRA Rule 12206 after
making a customer complaint, the proposed time limits would be unfair
and would increase the frequency of requests, as the associated person
would have to make a second expungement request if the customer
complaint was later the subject of an arbitration claim. Saretksy
stated that the time restriction was unnecessary because arbitrators
are ``free to weigh the evidentiary value (if any) of an associated
person's undue delay.'' Herskovits stated that FINRA's concern about
document retention was ``misplaced'' because SEC and FINRA rules
``generally mandate the preservation of most records for 3 to 6 years
(and many firms preserve documents for longer periods of time).''
Grebenik expressed concerns with the proposed time limits because there
were ``thousands of advisors who have customer disputes and do not know
about the expungement process.''
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\240\ See AdvisorLaw, Barber, Baritz, Behr, Brookes, FSI, Glenn,
Grebenik, Herskovits, Higgenbotham, JonesBell, Keesal, Leven,
Saretsky, SIFMA, Smart, Speicher, Stephens and Walter.
\241\ See also AdvisorLaw (stating that providing six months
where the customer arbitration closes on or prior to the effective
date of the proposed rule change was arbitrary and creates an
unjustifiable distinction between cases that close prior to the
rules and those that close after).
\242\ See supra note 48.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Other commenters supported the time limits.\243\ For example, UNLV
stated that the proposed time limit would ensure ``that relevant
evidence is available and increases investors' ability to
participate.'' In response to other commenters' suggestion that brokers
may not be aware of a customer complaint, Cornell stated that ``public
investors should not be penalized for the failure of firms to implement
streamlined notification and recordkeeping procedures,'' and that ``it
is not too much to ask that the associated person follow up as to
disposition by the firm.''
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\243\ See Cornell, Georgia State, PIABA, Public Citizen and
Schlein.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
PIABA ``strongly support[ed] a definite cut-off date for requests
for expungement,'' and stated that a customer is ``far more likely to
participate in an expungement hearing when it takes place in close
proximity to the resolution of the underlying arbitration proceeding.''
PIABA also stated that a more stringent time limit would lead to higher
quality evidence, which becomes less reliable and available with the
passage of time. PIABA stated that when the arbitration results in an
award, a shorter timeframe of 90 days is preferable because significant
time will already have passed from the filing of the customer's
arbitration claim, and because 90 days matches the deadline to file a
motion to vacate an arbitration award under the Federal Arbitration
Act. PIABA also stated that, because member firms and associated
persons control the date that information is reported in the CRD
system, the time limit for customer complaints should run from the
shorter of the date the firm initially reported the complaint in the
CRD system or a month after the associated person receives notice of
the complaint.
After considering the comments, FINRA believes that adjustments to
the originally proposed time limitations are warranted to provide
sufficient time for associated persons to determine whether to seek
expungement of customer dispute information. Accordingly, FINRA has
revised the proposal to provide for a two-year period to file an
expungement request when a customer arbitration or civil litigation
that gives rise to customer dispute information closes.\244\ The two-
year period would help ensure that the expungement hearing is held
close in time to the customer arbitration or civil litigation, when
information regarding the customer arbitration is available and in a
timeframe that would increase the likelihood for the customer to
participate if he or she chooses to do so. At the same time, it would
allow the associated person time to determine whether to seek
expungement.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\244\ See proposed Rule 13805(a)(2)(A)(iv).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
For customer complaints where no customer arbitration or civil
litigation gave rise to the customer dispute information, the proposed
rule change would provide for six years from the date that the customer
complaint was initially reported to the CRD system for the associated
person to file the expungement request.\245\ Six years would allow
firms time to complete investigations of customer complaints and close
them in the CRD system and for the complaints to evolve, or not evolve,
into an arbitration. Thus, the revised proposal would help avoid
unnecessary duplicative requests to expunge customer complaints that
subsequently evolve into arbitrations or civil litigations, while
providing reasonable time limits to encourage customer participation
and help ensure the availability of evidence. The proposed six-year
time limitation is also consistent with FINRA's general eligibility
rule, which provides that no claim shall be eligible for submission to
arbitration under the Code where six years have elapsed from the
occurrence or event giving rise to the claim.\246\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\245\ See proposed Rule 13805(a)(2)(A)(v).
\246\ See supra note 14.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The proposed rule change makes similar revisions to the time limits
described in Notice 17-42 to seek to expunge customer dispute
information that arose prior to the effective date of the proposed rule
change. For customer dispute information arising from customer
arbitrations or civil litigations that closed on or prior to the
effective date of the proposed rule change, the expungement request
would be required to be made within two years of the effective date of
the proposed rule change.\247\ For customer complaints initially
reported to the CRD system on or prior to the effective date of the
proposed rule change, where no customer arbitration or civil litigation
gave rise to the customer dispute information, the expungement request
would be required to be made within six years of the effective date of
the proposed rule change.\248\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\247\ See proposed Rule 13805(a)(2)(B)(i).
\248\ See proposed Rule 13805(a)(2)(B)(ii).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
14. Effect of Withdrawal of Expungement Request
In Notice 17-42, FINRA proposed that if the associated person
withdraws an expungement request after the panel is appointed in a
straight-in request, the case would be closed with prejudice, unless
the panel decides otherwise. AdvisorLaw supported the proposal, stating
that it would ``create safeguards, and prevent an associated person
from simply withdrawing their case and refiling in hopes of drawing a
more favorable pool of randomly selected arbitrators.''
Under the proposed rule change, for expungement requests during
customer arbitrations and straight-in requests, if the associated
person withdraws or does not pursue the expungement request (or the
party, with the written consent of the unnamed person, withdraws or
does not pursue the request), the panel would be required to deny the
expungement request with prejudice.\249\ These requirements would
foreclose the ability of associated persons withdrawing expungement
requests to avoid having
[[Page 62172]]
their requests decided by the panel, and then seeking to re-file the
request and receive a new list of arbitrators and a potentially more
favorable panel and decision.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\249\ See proposed Rules 12805(a)(1)(D)(i), 12805(a)(2)(E)(i)
and 13805(a)(4).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
15. Associated Person's Appearance Required at the Expungement Hearing
In Notice 17-42, FINRA proposed that an associated person seeking
to have his or her CRD record expunged would be required to appear at
the expungement hearing either in person or by video conference. Five
commenters supported the proposal, stating generally that this would
allow the arbitrators to better assess the associated person's demeanor
and credibility.\250\ UNLV also stated that requiring videoconferencing
would carry minimal costs given its widespread availability at FINRA's
regional offices and other venues. NASAA stated that the broker should
be required to appear in-person, ``given the extraordinary relief the
broker is seeking.'' Georgia State also supported requiring an
associated person to appear in person at the hearing, and stated that
appearance by video conference should only ``be permitted, if at all,
in those simplified cases where a hearing did not take place.''
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\250\ See Black, Caruso, Cornell, PIABA and UNLV.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Six commenters preferred to allow the associated person to appear
by telephone.\251\ SIFMA, for example, stated that there appeared to be
no basis for allowing customers, but not associated persons, to appear
by telephone, and that the proposal would ``greatly increase the cost
of expungement through attendant travel costs and loss of
productivity.'' Three commenters stated that the arbitrators should
decide the method of appearance.\252\ White, for example, stated that
telephonic testimony ``might be acceptable in limited circumstances,''
and suggested that ``arbitrators can make this determination and the
Rule should not limit their flexibility to do so.''
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\251\ See Baritz, Gocek, Grebenik, Keesal, SIFMA and
Tinklenberg.
\252\ See AdvisorLaw, Robbins and White.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
After considering the comments, the proposed rule change would
allow the panel to determine the method of appearance by the associated
person--by telephone, in person or by video conference.\253\ As the
associated person is requesting the permanent removal of information
from his or her CRD record, FINRA believes the associated person should
personally participate in the expungement hearing to respond to
questions from the panel and those customers who choose to participate.
Rather than restrict the method of appearance, the panel would have the
authority to decide which method of appearance would be the most
appropriate for the particular case.\254\ FINRA believes that providing
flexibility as to the method of appearance would encourage appropriate
fact-finding by the arbitrators and generally strengthen the process.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\253\ See proposed Rules 12805(c)(2) and 13805(c)(2).
\254\ See supra note 253.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
16. Customer Notification
In Notice 17-42, FINRA proposed that when an expungement request is
filed separately from the customer arbitration, FINRA would notify the
parties from the customer arbitration or the customer who initiated the
complaint that is the subject of the request about the expungement
request. PIABA supported the proposed customer notification
requirement. Georgia State recommended ``additional notifications to
the investor about the expungement hearing.''
The proposed rule change modifies the proposal in Notice 17-42 to
add an additional notification to help ensure that customers receive
timely notice of both the expungement request and the expungement
hearing. The associated person would be required to serve all customers
whose customer arbitrations, civil litigations and customer complaints
gave rise to customer dispute information that is a subject of the
expungement request with notice of the request by serving on the
customers a copy of the statement of claim requesting expungement
before the first scheduled hearing session is held.\255\ The Director
would then notify the customers of the time, date and place of the
expungement hearing using the customers' current address provided by
the party seeking expungement.\256\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\255\ See proposed Rule 13805(b)(1)(A); see also supra note 134.
\256\ See proposed Rule 13805(b)(2); see also supra note 137.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
17. Customer Participation During the Expungement Hearing
In Notice 17-42, FINRA proposed that, consistent with the Guidance,
all customers in the customer arbitration or who filed a customer
complaint would be entitled to appear at the expungement hearing. At
the customer's option, the customer could appear by telephone.
In response to Notice 17-42, PIABA and The SEC Investor Advocate
stated that FINRA should codify all of the customer rights provided in
the Guidance, including, for example, allowing the customer or their
counsel to introduce documents and other evidence and to cross-examine
the broker or other witnesses called by the broker seeking
expungement.\257\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\257\ See also St. John's.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
FINRA agrees that the customer rights contained in the Guidance
should be codified, as reflected in the proposed rule change.\258\ In
addition to incorporating the customer rights contained in the
Guidance, the proposed rule change also clarifies that the customer may
be represented and states that the customer may appear at the
expungement hearing by telephone, in person, or by video conference. In
addition, if a customer testifies, the associated person or other
person requesting expungement would be allowed to cross-examine the
customer. If the customer introduces any evidence at the expungement
hearing, the associated person or party requesting expungement could
object to the introduction of the evidence, and the panel would decide
any objections. The proposed rule change would allow and encourage
customers to participate fully in the expungement hearing, while
providing the associated person with a reasonable opportunity to rebut
evidence introduced by the customer.\259\
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\258\ See proposed Rules 12805(c) and 13805(c).
\259\ In response to the Notice 17-42, White stated that if the
customer chooses to object to the expungement request, ``it would be
helpful if it was mandated that the customer participate in the
hearing or file a substantive statement or brief opposing
expungement.'' Schlein stated that FINRA should consider requiring
the associated person to ``bear the cost of the customer's
attendance if the customer wishes to participate in person.'' FINRA
believes that these requirements would be unduly burdensome and,
therefore, has determined not to propose them as requirements.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
18. State Notification
In response to Notice 17-42, NASAA requested ``earlier notices to
state regulators of an expungement request to better facilitate
regulator involvement where appropriate.'' \260\ The proposed rule
change provides that FINRA would notify state securities regulators, in
the manner determined by FINRA, of the associated person's expungement
request within 30 days after receiving a complete request for
expungement, so that the states are timely notified of the
request.\261\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\260\ See also The SEC Investor Advocate.
\261\ See proposed Rules 12805(b) and 13805(b)(3).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
19. Unnamed Persons
In Notice 17-42, FINRA proposed to codify the ability of a party in
a customer arbitration to request expungement on behalf of an unnamed
person. AdvisorLaw stated that it opposed the practice and suggested
that FINRA prohibit it entirely as there
[[Page 62173]]
would be an ``inherent conflict'' of interest for the firm's counsel
because the interest of the member (who is the counsel's client) and
the associated person rarely align. AdvisorLaw also suggested that the
associated person's consent may be compromised ``in the likely scenario
where the member firm is providing financial assistance for the legal
representation, as the associated person may agree under financial
duress.'' NASAA supported codifying the practice, but noted that it
would ``require cooperation between firms and their associated
persons'' and that FINRA would have to develop ``robust, mandated
notification procedures.'' \262\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\262\ See NASAA (noting support for this change along with the
proposal in the Notice 17-42 that would prevent an unnamed
associated from filing an arbitration claim seeking expungement
against an investor).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
FINRA notes that under the proposed rule change, filing an on-
behalf-of request would be permissive, not mandatory. In addition,
FINRA would require the party and the unnamed person to sign a form
consenting to the on-behalf-of request to help ensure that the unnamed
person is fully aware of the request and that the firm is agreeing to
represent the unnamed person for the purpose of requesting expungement
during the customer arbitration, regardless of how the arbitration
closes.\263\
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\263\ See proposed Rules 12805(a)(2)(C)(ii) and 12805(a)(2)(D).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
20. No Interventions by Associated Persons To Request Expungement
In Notice 17-42, FINRA proposed to foreclose the option of an
unnamed person to intervene in a customer arbitration to request
expungement. Keesal opposed this proposal, stating that intervention
``often can be economical, given that the evidence on the merits (or
lack thereof) of the customer's complaint will be presented at the
evidentiary hearing and that same evidence will provide the basis for
expungement relief.'' \264\
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\264\ See also Behr and JonesBell.
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FINRA believes that where no party to the arbitration has filed a
claim against the associated person or requested expungement on his or
her behalf, the associated person's conduct is less likely to be
addressed fully by the parties during the customer arbitration. In
those circumstances, FINRA believes that the associated person should
not be able to intervene in the customer arbitration, and that any
expungement request should be decided separately by the Special
Arbitrator Roster.\265\
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\265\ See proposed Rule 12805(a)(1)(E)(iii); see also supra Item
II.A.1.(II)A.3, ``No Intervening in Customer Arbitrations to Request
Expungement.''
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21. Application of Expungement Framework to Customer Complaints
In Notice 17-42, FINRA proposed to allow an associated person to
file an arbitration against a member firm for the sole purpose of
seeking expungement of a customer complaint and have the request
decided by the Special Arbitrator Roster. In response to Notice 17-42,
NASAA stated that it objected to ``expanding the scope of Rule 2080 to
apply to all information related to [non-arbitrated] customer
complaints.'' NASAA stated that today, the expungement process is used
to expunge customer complaints that are not the subject of arbitration,
but believed that this practice was ``beyond the scope originally
intended with the rules'' and that codification would ``further embed a
flawed process that does not afford regulators the ability to preserve
information already considered to have regulatory value and provide
investor protection.'' The SEC Investor Advocate also indicated that it
did not believe that ``now is the time to expand the Rule 2080
expungement process to claims that do not result in arbitration,'' and
that it would ``prefer to see the results of the new process before
introducing an entirely new class of complaints to the mix.''
FINRA notes that customer complaints have always been within the
contemplated scope of FINRA Rule 2080. In proposing and adopting
predecessor NASD Rule 2130, and in proposing to adopt FINRA Rule 2080
without material change, FINRA defined ``customer dispute information''
as including ``customer complaints, arbitration claims, and court
filings made by customers, and the arbitration awards or court
judgments that may result from those claims or filings.'' \266\ The
proposed amendments would continue to allow associated persons to file
a claim in arbitration against a member firm for the sole purpose of
seeking expungement of a customer complaint that is reported in the CRD
system.
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\266\ See Notice to Members 04-16 (March 2004); Securities
Exchange Act Release No. 47435 (March 4, 2003), 68 FR 11435 (March
10, 2003) (Notice of Filing and Amendment No. 1 of File No. SR-NASD-
2002-168); Securities Exchange Act Release No. 59771 (April 15,
2009), 74 FR 18411 (April 22, 2009) (Notice of Filing and Amendment
No. 1 of File No. SR-FINRA-2009-016).
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22. Other General Comments in Response to Notice 17-42
A. Personal Experiences With the Expungement Process
Some commenters opposed the proposal as set forth in Notice 17-42
because of their experiences with what they considered to be meritless
customer arbitration claims.\267\ In addition, a number of commenters
described their personal experiences with the customer complaint and
expungement process or generally criticized the current process and the
proposed rule change as unfair.\268\ FINRA acknowledges and appreciates
the commenters' concerns and has considered them in connection with the
proposed rule change as a whole.
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\267\ See Anzaldua, Barber, Braschi, Brookes, Burrill, Christ,
Decker, Di Silvio, Gamblin, Glenn, Harmon, Harris, Higgenbotham,
Isola, Joyce, Leven, Lindsey, Ram, Rosser, Scrydloff, Skafco,
Slaughter, Stephens, Stewart, Tinklenberg, Walter, Weinerf and
Zanolli.
\268\ See e.g., Higgenbotham (describing CRD disclosures
``related to funds offered by my employer [that] crashed during the
2007-2008 Financial Crisis''); see also AdvisorLaw (providing a
hyperlink to an online petition that requested signatures to
``support a balanced, cost and time effective, expungement
process,'' and collecting associated comments).
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B. General Perspectives on the Proposed Rule Change
Some commenters also offered more general perspectives on the rule
proposal as set forth in Notice 17-42. The SEC Investor Advocate, while
generally supporting the proposed rule change, expressed a concern that
the proposed amendments may cause brokers to seek to avoid the FINRA
Rule 2080 process entirely, and instead request expungement directly in
a court of competent jurisdiction. FINRA notes that today, a broker can
seek expungement by going through the FINRA arbitration process or by
going directly to court.\269\
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\269\ See FINRA Rule 2080; see also supra note 12 (describing
the requirement to name FINRA as a party when brokers seek
expungement in court).
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SIFMA stated that FINRA already has in place a robust set of rules
and expanded guidance to safeguard the expungement process, and that
there did not appear to be any empirical justification for the
additional regulations contained in the proposal, such as that
expungements are too numerous or are being improperly granted.
PIABA stated that FINRA should only promulgate rules that
facilitate removal of customer dispute information from the CRD system
in the most extraordinary of circumstances. NASAA supported the
proposal as an ``important first step'' that ``add[ed] beneficial
requirements and limitations related to the procedure of expungement.''
FINRA appreciates the commenters' differing perspectives. FINRA's
review suggests that the percentage of expungement requests that are
[[Page 62174]]
recommended is higher when the arbitrator or panel receives information
only from the associated person or other party requesting
expungement.\270\ FINRA believes that the expungement process that
would be established by the proposed rule change would help ensure that
expungement is recommended in limited circumstances, while providing
associated persons with a reasonable framework to seek expungement of
information on their CRD records by establishing one or more of the
grounds set forth in FINRA Rule 2080(b)(1).
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\270\ See supra Item II.B.2., ``Economic Baseline.''
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C. Alternatives to the CRD Disclosure and Expungement Framework
Several commenters suggested alternatives to the current CRD
disclosure and expungement framework.\271\ For example, Mahoney stated
that where an arbitration panel renders an award denying a customer's
claims against an associated person, ``the associated person should
automatically have their CRD record expunged of all references to the
complaint.'' Mahoney also stated that FINRA should not subject
associated persons who are not named in a customer complaint, but were
determined by member firms to have been involved in the sales practice
violation(s), to disclosure and expungement standards that ``create an
unprecedented rebuttable presumption of liability.'' \272\ In contrast,
St. John's suggested that associated persons be prohibited from seeking
expungement if there has been a finding of liability in the
arbitration.
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\271\ See Barber, Baumgardner, Burrill, Butt, Chepucavage,
Commonwealth, Harmon, Harris, Mahoney, Penzell, PIABA, Stewart,
Tinklenberg and Wellington.
\272\ See also FSI.
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PIABA stated that although it supported the proposed rule change,
expungement requests would be best handled separate from the
arbitration and determined by FINRA itself rather than arbitrators.
NASAA proposed further reform to the expungement process built around
several principles including, for example, increased regulatory
participation that allows for a regulatory determination regarding the
merits of the expungement request.
FINRA appreciates the commenters' suggestions. As indicated by the
proposed rule change, FINRA believes that revising the current
expungement process as set forth in the proposed rule change,
particularly the establishment of a panel of arbitrators randomly
selected from the Special Arbitrator Roster to consider and decide
straight-in requests, would best help achieve the goal that expungement
should be recommended in limited circumstances. However, FINRA welcomes
continued engagement to discuss further ways to enhance the expungement
process.
D. Other Comments
In response to Notice 17-42, Public Citizen stated that the
explanation of expungement decisions that arbitrators write should be
made public to ensure transparency. FINRA notes that arbitrators are
required to provide a brief written explanation of the reasons for
recommending expungement in the arbitration award.\273\ The proposed
rule change would retain this requirement, but would remove the word
``brief'' to indicate to the arbitrators that they must provide enough
detail in the award to explain their rationale for recommending
expungement.\274\ As the Guidance suggests, the explanation must be
complete and not solely a recitation of one of the FINRA Rule 2080
grounds or language provided in the expungement request.\275\
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\273\ See FINRA Rule 12805.
\274\ See proposed Rules 12805(c)(8) and 13805(c)(8).
\275\ See supra note 3.
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In addition, FINRA makes arbitration awards publicly available in
the FINRA Arbitration Awards Online database (which provides
arbitration awards rendered in FINRA's arbitration forum as well as
other forums).\276\ To provide information to the public, BrokerCheck
links directly to the FINRA Arbitration Awards Online database. When a
broker's BrokerCheck record includes a reportable arbitration award,
the BrokerCheck record provides a hyperlink directly to the relevant
document.
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\276\ Arbitration Awards Online is available at https://www.finra.org/arbitration-and-mediation/arbitration-awards. This
database enables users to perform Web-based searches for FINRA and
historical NASD arbitration awards. Also available through the
database are historical awards for the New York Stock Exchange, the
American Stock Exchange, the Philadelphia Stock Exchange, the
Chicago Board Options Exchange, the Pacific Exchange/ARCA and the
Municipal Securities Rulemaking Board.
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PIABA stated that removal of customer dispute information from the
CRD system diminishes the ability of reputation to police business
misconduct because of ``FINRA's embrace of widespread pre-dispute
arbitration agreements,'' and because records from FINRA proceedings
are not available to the public on the same terms as public court
proceedings. As discussed above, the proposed rule change is intended
to help preserve in CRD information that is valuable to investors and
regulators, while allowing associated persons a reasonable mechanism to
remove information that is inaccurate.
Keesal suggested that orders from other respected arbitration
forums, such as the American Arbitration Association (``AAA''), should
be afforded the same weight as arbitral findings from arbitrators in
FINRA-administered arbitration, provided that (1) the arbitrators make
written, factual findings as the basis for expungement under FINRA Rule
2080 and (2) the requirements of FINRA Rule 12805 are satisfied. FINRA
appreciates the commenter's suggestion and would consider how to treat
arbitration awards recommending expungement in accordance with the
proposed rule change from other recognized arbitration forums, such as
AAA or JAMS, if the proposed rule change is approved by the Commission.
In addition, Keesal requested that FINRA provide guidance to
associated persons and registration personnel regarding the meaning and
effect of an expunged claim in the context of licensing and
registration questionnaires. Although the impact on licensing and
registration questionnaires is outside the scope of the proposed rule
change, FINRA will consider whether additional guidance is appropriate.
III. Date of Effectiveness of the Proposed Rule Change and Timing for
Commission Action
Within 45 days of the date of publication of this notice in the
Federal Register or within such longer period (i) as the Commission may
designate up to 90 days of such date if it finds such longer period to
be appropriate and publishes its reasons for so finding or (ii) as to
which the self-regulatory organization consents, the Commission will:
(A) By order approve or disapprove such proposed rule change, or
(B) institute proceedings to determine whether the proposed rule
change should be disapproved.
IV. Solicitation of Comments
Interested persons are invited to submit written data, views and
arguments concerning the foregoing, including whether the proposed rule
change is consistent with the Act. Comments may be submitted by any of
the following methods:
Electronic Comments
Use the Commission's internet comment form (https://www.sec.gov/rules/sro.shtml); or
[[Page 62175]]
Send an email to [email protected]. Please include
File Number SR-FINRA-2020-030 on the subject line.
Paper Comments
Send paper comments in triplicate to Secretary, Securities
and Exchange Commission, 100 F Street NE, Washington, DC 20549-1090.
All submissions should refer to File Number SR-FINRA-2020-030. This
file number should be included on the subject line if email is used. To
help the Commission process and review your comments more efficiently,
please use only one method. The Commission will post all comments on
the Commission's internet website (https://www.sec.gov/rules/sro.shtml).
Copies of the submission, all subsequent amendments, all written
statements with respect to the proposed rule change that are filed with
the Commission, and all written communications relating to the proposed
rule change between the Commission and any person, other than those
that may be withheld from the public in accordance with the provisions
of 5 U.S.C. 552, will be available for website viewing and printing in
the Commission's Public Reference Room, 100 F Street NE, Washington, DC
20549, on official business days between the hours of 10 a.m. and 3
p.m. Copies of such filing also will be available for inspection and
copying at the principal office of FINRA. All comments received will be
posted without change. Persons submitting comments are cautioned that
we do not redact or edit personal identifying information from comment
submissions. You should submit only information that you wish to make
available publicly. All submissions should refer to File Number SR-
FINRA-2020-030 and should be submitted on or before October 22, 2020.
For the Commission, by the Division of Trading and Markets,
pursuant to delegated authority.\277\
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\277\ 17 CFR 200.30-3(a)(12).
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J. Matthew DeLesDernier,
Assistant Secretary.
[FR Doc. 2020-21660 Filed 9-30-20; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 8011-01-P